Stay updated with breaking news from Terry sakamoto. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
ABC News(NEW YORK) It's an old Hollywood story: some criminal suspects believe they can outrun the law, and escape their charges, by fleeing to Mexico. But when fugitives who commit a crime in the United States cross the southern border, the U.S. g. ....
ABC - National News - Xtra 99.1 FM - Today's Hits and Yesterday's Favorites xtra99.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from xtra99.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Inside Mexico's 'Gringo Hunters' as they track down, capture foreign fugitivesZach Fannin, Rachel Rosenbaum, Anne Laurent, Jaclyn Skurie, and Ivan Pereira, ABC News wttf.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wttf.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
(NEW YORK) — It’s an old Hollywood story: some criminal suspects believe they can outrun the law, and escape their charges, by fleeing to Mexico. But when fugitives who commit a crime in the United States cross the southern border, the U.S. government requires some […] ....
ABC News(NEW YORK) It s an old Hollywood story: some criminal suspects believe they can outrun the law, and escape their charges, by fleeing to Mexico.
But when fugitives who commit a crime in the United States cross the southern border, the U.S. government requires some external help in tracking them down.
"No nation is just going into another nation to put handcuffs on somebody," John Muffler, a former U.S. Marshal, told "Impact x Nightline."
Oftentimes, help comes in the form of a specialized Mexican state police unit nicknamed the "Gringo Hunters."
The nickname isn t particularly popular with the unit s officers but it fits, as their mission is to find and detain foreign fugitives, mostly Americans, who cross the border into Mexico, hoping to escape the U.S. legal system. Officially, the group is called the International Liaison Unit in Baja California, the northwesternmost region of Mexico.