Los Angeles Times

U.S. man is killed at Tijuana eatery

Larry Macy, who lived in Mexico, was one of three victims in Oct. 21 shooting.

- By Sandra Dibble Dibble writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

A decision to stop for a meal almost two weeks ago at a small seafood restaurant in Tijuana’s Camino Verde neighborho­od proved fatal for Larry Macy, a U.S. citizen living in Mexico.

Baja California authoritie­s confirmed Tuesday that Macy was one of three people killed when a man opened fire inside Mariscos El Paisa at 7:45 p.m. Oct. 21. They blame the slayings on the drug trade in Camino Verde, one of the more violent areas of the city.

Authoritie­s said that Macy was apparently not a target, and that no arrests had been made as of Tuesday.

Friends said Macy and his Mexican fiance had gone out for dinner after visiting the fiance’s mother, who lived in the neighborho­od; the fiance escaped unharmed.

Macy had been living in Tijuana but recently moved to Puerto Vallarta with his fiance, a friend said.

“They had flown up to Tijuana so Larry could take care of some personal matters in San Diego,” said Gerald Filice of Sacramento.

Filice said that Macy was a longtime member of the Internatio­nal Imperial Court System, one of the oldest and largest LGBT organizati­ons in the world.

While living in Tijuana, Macy had been working to get the chapter there reactivate­d, Filice said. The group supports AIDS organizati­ons, homeless shelters and other groups in need of support.

“We called him the ambassador,” said Nicole Murray-Ramirez, a longtime LGBT activist who is the organizati­on’s leader and a member of the San Diego Human Relations Commission. “He would give us reports, tell us about the needs and assess what was needed there. He was a kindhearte­d man who cared about those less fortunate.”

Authoritie­s with the state coroner’s office confirmed Macy’s death after family members identified him Monday.

Memorial services are being planned on both sides of the border.

Macy is among an unpreceden­ted number of homicide victims in Tijuana this year; through Oct. 30, the total was 1,451, with 174 in October.

Authoritie­s attribute most of the incidents to rivalries among street-level drug dealers, but innocent victims also have been caught in the crossfire.

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