Mexico house raid uncovers workshop for drone-carried bombs - Los Angeles Times
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Police raid on a house in western Mexico uncovers workshop for drone-carried bombs

Members of the National Guard on patrol in Mexico
Members of Mexico’s National Guard patrol during an operation in Lagos de Moreno in Jalisco state.
(Ulises Ruiz / AFP / Getty Images)
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A police raid on a house built to look like a castle uncovered a workshop for making drone-carried bombs, authorities in Mexico’s western state of Jalisco said Wednesday.

State police distributed photos of 40 small cylindrical bombs with fins meant to be released from drones, authorities said. Police said they also found bomb-making materials, including about 45 pounds of metal shrapnel and 15 pounds of gunpowder.

A man was spotted running into the house but he apparently escaped out the back, and no arrests were made, officials said.

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A drone packed with methamphetamine crashed into a parking lot in Mexico close to the California border, according to Tijuana Public Safety Secretariat.

The raid occurred Wednesday in Teocaltiche, a town in an area where the Jalisco and Sinaloa drug cartels have been fighting bloody turf battles. In August, five youths went missing in the nearby city of Lagos de Moreno, and videos surfaced suggesting their captors may have forced the victims to kill each other.

In August, the Mexican army said drug cartels have increased their use of drone-carried bombs, which were unknown in Mexico before 2020. In the first eight months of this year, 260 such attacks were recorded.

Even that number, however, may be an underestimate. Residents in some parts of the neighboring state of Michoacan say attacks by bomb-dropping drones are a near-daily occurrence.

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With the ruling party nomination, López Obrador protege Claudia Sheinbaum is favored to be Mexico’s next president; she’s facing Sen. Xóchitl Gálvez.

Attacks with roadside bombs or improvised explosive devices also rose this year, with 42 soldiers, police officers and suspects wounded by IEDs, up from 16 in 2022.

The army figures appeared to include only those wounded by explosive devices. Officials have acknowledged that at least one National Guard officer and four state police officers have been killed in two explosive attacks this year.

Six car bombs have been found so far in 2023, up from one in 2022. However, car bombs were also occasionally used years ago in northern Mexico. Overall, 556 improvised explosive devices of all types — roadside, drone-carried and car bombs — were found between January and August. A total of 2,186 have been found during the current administration, which took office in December 2018.

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