Warning (Graphic): Subway shooting in Mexico

Barca

Active member
Sep 8, 2008
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One guy was brave enough to do something and pays the ultimate price. Everyone else cowers and fails to help him out which is why he ultimately died. Disgusting. I hope their conscience bothers them for the rest of their lives.
 

5hummer

Active member
Sep 6, 2008
3,788
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One guy was brave enough to do something and pays the ultimate price. Everyone else cowers and fails to help him out which is why he ultimately died. Disgusting. I hope their conscience bothers them for the rest of their lives.
Doubt it.
It's so corrupted in Mexico.

The country is basically run by 3-4 drug cartels that are more powerful than the police and Mexican army.
 

stinkynuts

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Jan 4, 2005
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MEXICO CITY, Mexico (CNN) -- Mexican authorities deployed more than 1,000 additional police officers to reinforce security at the capital's 175 subway stations on Saturday, a day after a shooting inside a station left two people dead and eight injured at the height of evening rush hour.


Camera footage shows Luis Felipe Hernandez Castillo brandishing a gun.

1 of 2 The shooting at the Balderas station in central Mexico City happened after police stopped Luis Felipe Hernandez Castillo, 38, from writing graffiti on the wall of one of the subway platforms.

Five of the injured suffered gunshot wounds, and three others were hurt by the stampeding crowds, officials said.

Hernandez Castillo was writing "Este gobierno de criminales," or "this government of criminals," Mexico City district attorney Miguel Angel Mancera said. As police tried to stop him, Hernandez Castillo drew a .38 special handgun and began firing.

Mancera said his first impression of Hernandez Castillo is that he may suffer from mental illness.

"One moment he is talking about global warming and then about the message of the Bible and suddenly he focuses on some government," Mancera said.

Authorities identified Hernandez Castillo as an agriculturalist from the state of Jalisco.

Hernandez Castillo also told investigators that he believed a great famine would come, and he traveled to Mexico City to relay a message, Mancera said.

Earlier this month, a Bolivian pastor hijacked a passenger jet in Mexico City with a fake bomb, claiming that he acted on a divine revelation to warn people of a forthcoming earthquake.

Mancera said Hernandez Castillo was aware of the hijacking, but that the two events were not connected.

Hernandez Castillo said he opened fire because he saw the police as a threat to his task of writing on the wall, Mancera said.

Preliminary tests show that Hernandez Castillo was not under the influence of alcohol or drugs during the incident, Mancera said.

The Mexican government on Saturday posted security camera footage of the shooting. It shows a busy subway platform as the train pulls into the station just before 5:15 p.m. Friday. As the train comes to a stop, there is a disturbance in the crowd, and Hernandez Castillo is seen shooting at an officer. Watch the dramatic incident unfold »

The crowd disperses, and the officer runs out of view of the camera. The officer, who was a bank policeman, is later seen on the footage lying dead, face down on the platform.

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Authorities identified the officer as Victor Manuel Miranda Martinez.

The footage shows a man in a white shirt running off the train and trying to wrestle Hernandez Castillo. The man chases Hernandez Castillo around the platform. He frequently falls either because he slips or is trying to avoid being shot.

The man is on the floor facing Hernandez Castillo, about to get up and try to grab him, when he is shot in the head and falls to the ground.

Mancera initially said the man was a federal security agent in plain clothes, but later clarified that the man was a civilian, a 58-year-old construction worker.

A scattered handful of people remain on the subway platform during the shooting. Some stay on the train. Others walk on the platform very close to the shooter, seemingly undisturbed.

Seven minutes later, the camera pans out to show the construction worker lying on his back and the bank police officer in the foreground. Hernandez Castillo remains on the train, occasionally firing his gun and peeking out of the train.

At 5:23 p.m., the camera shows first one, then two, then three plain-clothes police getting into position on the platform. Within moments they rush Hernandez Castillo and pull him out of the train, with nearly a dozen police officers then wrestling him to the ground.


Hernandez Castillo was treated at a hospital for a bullet wound to the right shoulder before being transferred to the local attorney general's office, a common place to hold prisoners during preliminary investigations, a spokesman for the attorney general said.

He faces two counts of murder and one count each of attempted murder, aggression, resisting arrest and disturbing the peace, said the spokesman, who declined to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the press.
 

stinkynuts

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Jan 4, 2005
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Do you think this kind of tragedy can happen in Toronto?

I know there have been a few subway pushings, but I don't think anything like this. Do you think the security is good?

I RARELY see the TTC police patrolling the subway stations. Maybe because Toronto is very safe, but even still it would be comforting if there was at least one officer at every subway station all the time.
 

stinkynuts

Super
Jan 4, 2005
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Horrific.


Well, as said, it could happen anyway ... really feel bad for the guy who tried to stop the shooter. He really tried.
His life could have been easily saved if a couple of the onlookers had the balls to help him out. Pathetic.


Well, they must have been retarded as well, so who can blame them? What kind of idiot stands by and watches a shooter kill someone?
 

ChaosTheory

Registered User
May 8, 2009
2,512
428
83
One guy was brave enough to do something and pays the ultimate price. Everyone else cowers and fails to help him out which is why he ultimately died. Disgusting. I hope their conscience bothers them for the rest of their lives.

You said it brother. i totally agree.
They should have helped him.
That man died a hero.
 

BallzDeep

New member
Feb 12, 2007
2,265
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One guy was brave enough to do something and pays the ultimate price. Everyone else cowers and fails to help him out which is why he ultimately died. Disgusting. I hope their conscience bothers them for the rest of their lives.
It was total chaos you retard, I find it funny when people type on their computer what they would have done.
 

ChaosTheory

Registered User
May 8, 2009
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It was total chaos you retard, I find it funny when people type on their computer what they would have done.
It was Chaos in Theory :)) )
anyways,

you are right, it is different when a person is actually there. However, that is even more of a testimate to the fact of how courageous that gentleman and security officer were and they should be honoured. I, and I am sure the families of those wish, that they had help...seeing that one person was detracting the killer only needed one other to be brave enough to end this by helping.

But alas, it is not the witness' fault at all. It is the killers. He should be the focus.
We hope we are as brave as those gentlemen if ever faced with such a situation.
That was horrific and senseless.
 

Manji

The Balance of Opposites
Jan 17, 2004
11,804
129
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Do you think this kind of tragedy can happen in Toronto?

I know there have been a few subway pushings, but I don't think anything like this. Do you think the security is good?

I RARELY see the TTC police patrolling the subway stations. Maybe because Toronto is very safe, but even still it would be comforting if there was at least one officer at every subway station all the time.


It could happen here.....hopefully not....

Something like that could happen anywhere.....
It's like an act of nature (like an earthquake or lightning)....It won't happen often but when it does it can be devastating....

Probably easier to get a gun in Mexico (and the US) but it's not impossible to get one here in Canada (especially Toronto)....
 
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