Rome News-Tribune

Mexico probes shooting of U.S. Embassy car by federal cops

- The Associated Press

— Mexican authoritie­s are trying to sort out why a U.S. Embassy vehicle was ambushed by federal police on a rural back road south of the capital, leaving two U.S. government workers wounded.

Officials from both nations said federal officers were chasing criminals Friday morning when a hail of bullets was fired at the embassy sport utility vehicle carrying the two employees and a Mexican Navy captain.

Federal police earlier said men in four vehicles fired at the SUV, and a Mexican Attorney General’s Office spokesman confirmed Saturday that all were federal police units. He could not be named because he was not authorized to speak on the record.

The official said Mexico’s top police official, Public Security Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna, went to the site of the shooting, indicating the sensitivit­y and tension over a situation that involved an attack not only on U.S. officials, but also on Mexican Navy personnel.

The U.S. Embassy took nearly 12 hours to issue a statement Friday, but described the incident as an “ambush.”

U.S. officials did not identify the wounded employees or their assignment­s or agencies, saying only that they were heading to a military training base south of Mexico City and traveling with a Mexican naval captain, who was not seriously injured.

The Mexican official said 12 police officers had been detained.

The two American workers were taken to a hospital in the nearby resort city of Cuernavaca. One had a gunshot wound in his leg, and the other was wounded in the stomach and a hand, said a Mexican government official who spoke on condition of anonymity. Hospital officials in Cuernavaca said the wounded were later transferre­d to a Mexico City hospital in stable condition.

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The Associated Press ?? Connie Rivero and her son Anthony Amador fill plastic bags with sand Saturday at the Hollywood Public Works Department as they prepare for possible floods from Tropical Storm Isaac in Hollywood, Fla.
Al Diaz / The Associated Press Connie Rivero and her son Anthony Amador fill plastic bags with sand Saturday at the Hollywood Public Works Department as they prepare for possible floods from Tropical Storm Isaac in Hollywood, Fla.

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