US anti-kidnapping expert kidnapped in Mexico

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http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/world/6166367.html

US anti-kidnapping expert kidnapped in Mexico
By MARK STEVENSON Associated Press Writer
Dec. 15, 2008, 6:49PM

MEXICO CITY — A U.S. anti-kidnapping expert was abducted by gunmen in northern Mexico last week, a sign of just how bold this nation's kidnapping gangs have become.

U.S. security consultant Felix Batista — who claims to have helped resolve nearly 100 kidnap and ransom cases — was in Saltillo in Coahuila state to offer advice on how to confront abductions for ransom when he himself was seized, local authorities said.

Unknown assailants grabbed him on Dec. 10, said Charlie LeBlanc, the president of the Houston, Texas-based security firm ASI Global LLC., where Batista is a consultant.

"We have notified the FBI and Mexican authorities, and they are working on the case," LeBlanc said Monday. "What we are doing is we're offering our support to the family and hoping for the best."

The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City said it would not comment on the case, and LeBlanc declined to say whether a ransom demand had been received.

LeBlanc said Batista had his own security business and that "he was in Mexico for business that wasn't associated with our company."

"Part of that could be or may involve negotiations with kidnappers," Leblanc said.
ASI Global's Web site advertises "kidnap and ransom response" and says the company has worked for major insurance companies.

A woman who answered a phone number listed under Batista's name in Miami, Fla.. said she did not wish to comment on the case.

Batista was frequently cited as an anti-kidnapping expert at conferences and in the press.

A story in the December issue of the trade magazine Security Management describes how Batista organized relatives' response to a kidnapping in Mexico, even cooking the family meals at times. He advised the family during months-long negotiations that eventually reduced the ransom request to about a third of the original amount the kidnappers had demanded. The victim was eventually released.

Local media reported that Batista was 55 years old, but his age was not included on his professional profile.

Kidnapping has become a rising problem in Mexico, but attacks on U.S. anti-crime consultants have largely been the stuff of movies. The seizure seems to echo the plot of a 2004 movie, "Man on Fire," in which Denzel Washington played a U.S. security consultant who takes on Mexican kidnappers and is abducted himself.

A series of high-profile kidnappings in which the victims were later found dead has sparked outrage in Mexico. In the past year, the bodies of the daughter of Mexico's former sports commissioner and the son of a prominent businessman have been found.
Non-governmental groups claim Mexico has one of the world's highest kidnapping rates, surpassing Colombia.

Earlier this year, more than 100,000 people marched through Mexico City to protest rising crime. Many people carried pictures of kidnapped relatives.

Coahuila's governor set off a nationwide controversy by proposing to reinstate the death penalty for kidnappers who kill their victims.

Coahuila state law enforcement officials who were not authorized to be quoted by name said Batista had been giving talks to local police officials and businessmen on how to prevent or avoid kidnappings.

They said he apparently was snatched from a street outside a restaurant.

A profile of Batista posted — and later removed — from the ASI Global Web site described him as "the primary case officer for all cases throughout the Latin American region."

The site said Batista was a former U.S. Army major who is "known for conducting in-depth threat assessments, the successful resolution of nearly 100 kidnap and ransom cases (many on behalf of major insurance carriers) and investigations."

The company denied local media reports that Batista was a former FBI agent, and warned those reports could put his life at risk.
 
Several things come to mind on reading this story. Something about always watching your six. Something about when you stare into the abyss the abyss also stares into you.

Thing is, anyone can have a bad day no matter how much of a pro they are. If you ever have a bad day, who do you have on line to back you up? How would they know something was wrong? How would they know what to do? If you fell into a hole right now, how long would it be before someone missed you, started looking for you, started calling about you?

Think ahead to the bad day you might have someday. Make sure there will be some help lined up... if all else fails.

lpl
 
It is highly likely that he was betrayed and set up by someone he was working for or with. Also there is no evidence that he had any kind of professional protection or a bodyguard detail – even though he was doing a dangerous job in a dangerous place, and his background made him an attractive target.

Jeff Cooper on several occasions went into a similar environment, but he came home because he made sure that as a target, he was very, very unattractive.

Right now northern Mexico and the border country is a good place to avoid. Those that don’t should accept the fact that they may be kidnapped or worse.
 
An anti-kidnapping expert isn't an authority on close protection. It sounds like he was travelling as a corporate executive... without EP escort. No working "radar". Hopefully, as a man who advises in anti-kidnapping technics, one of the thinks you would be advising potential victims on is to avoid taking instructions from someone who calls you on a telephone.

... he was in a restaurant when he received a call on his cellphone that prompted him to get up and leave, officials told the local news media. That is when the armed men took him away...

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/16/world/americas/16mexico.html?ref=world
 
How many of you are aware...

... of how absolutely out-of-control the violence in Mexico has become over the past year?

Living here in Texas just a few miles from the border, I'm real close to it. But from what I've seen on the network national news, it isn't getting much attention across the rest of the country. Kidnappings, murders, and random shooting sprees are daily occurances in many large Mexican cities nowadays. Along the California border, there have been a number of carjackings, where women driving alone in SUVs are targeted. The women are held in Mexico for ransom, and the drug cartels use the SUVs for their purposes.

It's bad and getting worse. Juarez is approaching 2000 killed since January. Tijuana is up there, too. Nuevo Laredo is a smaller city, but the per capita violence is probably even higher. Even small towns on the border like Palomas, Mexico/Columbus, New Mexico are seeing many cartel-sanctioned murders.

Any Americans going to Mexico in the current climate are risking their lives.
 
lee lapin said:
Something about when you stare into the abyss the abyss also stares into you.


"Those who study evil are studied by evil..."

As much as a geek as this makes me sound, the only place I can remember that being quoted that way is in Star Trek: DS9
 
mbt2001 Quote:
Originally Posted by lee lapin
Something about when you stare into the abyss the abyss also stares into you.


"Those who study evil are studied by evil..."

As much as a geek as this makes me sound, the only place I can remember that being quoted that way is in Star Trek: DS9

Think it's more or less Fredreich Nietzsche(SP?) I know spelled that wrong, not the point!

He might've been out of his element, acted stupid, or whatever. He can be this Green Beret/Marine/ArmyRanger/DeltaForce/BlackWater/ArnoldStalloneVinDieselNorris Badass. Guess what? He's still human. He can still be hurt, and he can still be killed, albeit it IS pretty damned ironic that the anti-kidnapping expert was, in fact, kidnapped.
 
......Priceless!
:flamesuit-on:

The ironing is killing me. But seriously, I hope that this ends in a desirable manner for him and his family.
 
If he survives, it will be a blockbuster action movie. If he doesn't, Blackwater could become very pissed off.
 
Hope his children get their Father back in one piece, and not Dead.

The common response that I've heard around Phoenix here is that "oh, it's criminal on criminal crime...so we don't worry about it".

Hope he makes it back alive.
Here's a guy sounded like he was doing something about the issue.
Godspeed, Bro.
 
He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.
Friedrich Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil.
 
"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
-attributed to Edmond Burke

"People sleep peacefully in their beds at night because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf."
-George Orwell

"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle."
-Edmond Burke
 
The sad part to me is that if he dies (if not already), he will die a realtive unknown, and we'll probably never hear about it. No flag for his coffin. Hope his children get their Father back in one piece, and not Dead. Over 300 kidnappings here in Phoenix this year.
 
Remembers me of the antipirate Brit expert who advocated protecting ships off Somalia without firearms - sirens and hoses. Then his team jumped overboard when their ship was hijacked.

I hope the guy comes out OK, though.
 
I am glad everyone here is all heart. :( Have you ever been to Mexico? Do you know ANY of the restrictions there? Any of the dangers? (from the authorities) as well as criminal element. (ok so I am asking question twice) in some cases.

So he is expert in getting people back alive? Expert in preventing kidnapping? expert in protection? It sounds to me as if he was unarmed (Mexico you know) by himself.

Let me put it this way. (since Chuck Norris comes up often) IF he was NOT a movie actor (and as good as shown on TV in real life)
He is ALONE in Mexico on street at night. The kidnappers likely outnumbered him/were armed/ and may have even been uniformed/in a squad.

I hope he gets home safe.
 
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