Los Angeles Times

3 arrested in rock attacks

Incidents targeted tourist buses between Tijuana, San Ysidro

- By Sandra Dibble sandra.dibble@sduniontri­bune.com Dibble writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

TIJUANA — Building a company that ferries passengers between Tijuana and San Ysidro is Carlos Díaz’s long-fought dream.

So when rock throwers began targeting his Ticketon buses as the vehicles made their way from Tijuana’s airport to the U.S.-Mexico border, there was no question. He would keep going — even after 23 incidents in the last 16 months.

Just as it seemed things couldn’t get any worse, Díaz’s luck may have turned a corner. Business leaders and public officials in Tijuana are vowing that the attacks must stop. In recent days, they’ve made public statements and held news conference­s to support Díaz, Ticketon’s founder and president. And on Monday, for the first time, police arrested suspects.

“This is not just an act against Ticketon,” Baja California tourism secretary O scar Escobedo said. “This affects all tourism operators in the state.”

In the complex world of cross-border commerce, Ticketon fills a niche: shuttling passengers between Tijuana and San Diego in a narrow strip that spans the internatio­nal border.

With 25 buses, minibuses and vans, the company carries an average of 180 passengers a day. Most of those customers are passengers in transit, making their way between Tijuana’s A.L. Rodríguez Internatio­nal Airport and San Ysidro, where they board buses for destinatio­ns such as Anaheim, Riverside, Ontario and Santa Ana.

Ticketon is not the first cross-border bus company targeted by rock throwers. In 2002, a San Diego charter bus company suspended operations because of incidents after cab drivers complained buses were stealing their customers. In 2007, five companies reported a total of 30 such attacks in a twoweek period.

Despite the attacks, Díaz vows to stay in business. “We’ve all got to do our bit to reactivate tourism.”

The attacks against Ticketon began in February 2016, after Díaz seized on a new opportunit­y: transporti­ng people between San Ysidro and Tijuana’s tourist strip, Avenida Revolución. He he hopes to bring back crowds of visitors to the city.

That service, called TJ Passport, hasn’t sat well with a group of Tijuana yellow-taxi operators who have sought to control the business of driving pedestrian­s who walk into Tijuana from San Ysidro, Díaz said.

A news crew from the Spanish-language Telemundo TV station in San Diego happened to be shooting a story about the incidents when a Ticketon bus was attacked Monday.

Police arrested three suspects, two of whom are linked to the yellow taxis, authoritie­s said. All three face charges of carrying out a dangerous attack and causing property damage connected to gang activity.

“This type of crime hurts tourism and damages the image” of Baja California, said Jorge Alvarez, head of the Baja California attorney general’s office in Tijuana.

The leader of the taxi operators, Oscar Morales, could not be reached for comment.

Since the attacks began, Ticketon has suffered $20,000 in material damage and business has dropped off by 25%, Díaz said.

No passengers have been injured, but one of his drivers was struck by a rock but was able to pull over. Tijuana police cars now escort Ticketon buses between the airport and the border.

 ?? Alejandro Tamayo San Diego Union-Tribune ?? CARLOS DÍAZ’S Ticketon shuttles became the target of rock throwers in February 2016, after he began ferrying people between San Ysidro and Tijuana. Cab drivers complained he was stealing their business, he said.
Alejandro Tamayo San Diego Union-Tribune CARLOS DÍAZ’S Ticketon shuttles became the target of rock throwers in February 2016, after he began ferrying people between San Ysidro and Tijuana. Cab drivers complained he was stealing their business, he said.

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