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 was in Saltillo in Coahuila
state to offer advice on how to confront abductions for ransom when he
was snatched by unknown assailants 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."
Batista's work involved crisis management consulting, LeBlanc
said. "Part of that could be or may involve negotiations with
kidnappers."
ASI Global's Web site advertises "kidnap and ransom response" and
says the company has worked for major insurance companies.
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 daughter of the country's former sports commissioner and the
son of a prominent businessman have been found.
Coahuila's governor set off a nationwide controversy by proposing
to reinstate the death penalty for kidnappers who kill their victims.
Mexico outlawed the death penalty in 2005 and abandoned it in practice
decades ago.
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.
"We at ASI are very concerned for Felix's safety and would like to
take this opportunity of stating categorically that Felix has never
been an agent in the FBI," the company said in a statement.
Damn.. irony...
owned~
there goes his career
owned like shit
GODLIKE!
Theres always a loop hole to everything. Security isn't 100%.
how ironic
Doctors will still fall sick. Hawker centre stall owners also will get hungry.
lol the topic is hilarious haha
the kidnapping gangs haven't gotten any bolder.
just shows the kinds of pple the US are willing to consider experts.
DAMN. i should make my way down to the states!!!