San Diego Union-Tribune

TIJUANA GETS NEW MAYOR AMID GOVERNOR’S ACCUSATION­S

Ruiz first female to hold position; predecesso­r decries Bonilla’s claims

- BY WENDY FRY & ALEXANDRA MENDOZA

The first female mayor of Tijuana is taking office today amid a tumultuous transition.

Karla Ruiz MacFarland, the current secretary of municipal education, will step in to fill the last year of Arturo González Cruz’s two-year mayoral term.

Ruiz will become the first female mayor of Mexico’s northern border city of approximat­ely 2.1 million residents, city officials said Thursday. She is taking office during a heated controvers­y within her own Morena political party between the governor of the state and her predecesso­r.

González, who took office in October 2019, is stepping down after Baja California Gov. Jaime Bonilla tossed out an unproven accusation last week alleging the mayor’s involvemen­t in the assassinat­ion of a controvers­ial local blogger.

González insisted his departure from public office was not because of Bonilla’s “false accusation­s,” which he strongly denied,

and said he plans to seek legal action to stop.

While announcing his decision to leave office and naming his replacemen­t on Wednesday, González described Ruiz as “a committed woman that I am sure will continue with the work in each delegation and each neighborho­od.”

Ruiz has not made any public statements about her mayoral appointmen­t and was not available for an interview Thursday, a city spokeswoma­n said.

González stressed he plans to continue working in the public sector either for the political party to which both he and Bonilla belong or by running for another elected office. He is considered by some a potential contender for Bonilla’s job in 2021.

“I will continue to focus on providing a project of welfare, social justice, care, honesty, openness, understand­ing, union and sanity,” he said in his farewell speech.

Mariano Rafael Soto Cortez, who was killed on Oct. 4, ran a news and gossip site called “Tijuana Sin Censura” or “Tijuana Uncensored.” The website focuses on narco crime, posting insider informatio­n about violence between drug cartels in the border region. It also shares regional gossip about local public officials.

Soto was fatally shot inside his white Volkswagen Bora while parked in front of a mini-mart on Prolongaci­ón Paseo de los Heroes street in the “20 de Noviembre” neighborho­od of Tijuana. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

He had previously been injured in the back and arm during a Sept. 9 shooting, about a month before he was killed.

In 2019, Soto was convicted of extortion and sentenced to five years in prison and a 22,000-peso ($1,031) fine for threatenin­g Tijuana’s Secretary of Economic Developmen­t Arturo Perez Behr, with an Internet smear campaign if the public official did not agree to make payments to Soto.

Soto’s sentence required him to report to prison custody only on Saturdays and Sundays, but the punishment was suspended on

March 23 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. His sentence also barred him from publishing items on his website or social networks, guidelines Soto apparently ignored.

Days before his death, Soto published a piece on “Tijuana Sin Censura” alleging Tijuana municipal police had seized 600 kilos of cocaine from a location in Palm Valley, between Tijuana and Tecate, without reporting the large drug seizure to the Attorney General. He also reported he received threats that he would be killed if he did not take down his post.

The day he was killed, Soto made an audio recording that said if anything happened to him the Tijuana mayor and the city’s secretary of public safety, Jorge Ayón Monsalve, were responsibl­e, according to the governor and multiple news reports that shared the recording online.

Prosecutor Hiram Sánchez said the state Attorney General’s Office offered Soto protective police custody on the day he was killed.

“He refused, mainly saying he did not trust any security institutio­n,” said Sánchez.

Soto was not recognized as a journalist by Tijuana’s union of reporters, which cited his extortion activities. He was included in a federal protection mechanism for journalist­s and human rights defenders. The program doesn’t have any enforcemen­t authority but does condemn attacks against people under its protection.

Sánchez said that so far there is no evidence or any line of investigat­ions that would warrant investigat­ors bringing in González or Ayón for questionin­g about Soto’s death. They are not currently suspects or persons of interest in the homicide investigat­ion, he said.

Ruiz, the newly appointed mayor of Tijuana, is the daughter of state Attorney General Guillermo Ruiz Hernández, who was appointed by Bonilla.

González said he plans to seek legal action against Bonilla for the false accusation­s.

“If anyone is responsibl­e for the death of that person, it is you,” González said to Bonilla last Thursday, the day the governor made the public accusation­s during his daily live-streamed news update. The daily briefings started as a mechanism to inform the public about the coronaviru­s pandemic but have since expanded in the topics tackled by the governor and his staff.

Bonilla told the Union-Tribune that the victim’s family also believes the mayor is responsibl­e for Soto’s killing, and that several other recordings the blogger made before his death point to González. Soto’s family could not be reached for comment.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Karla Ruiz MacFarland will fill the last year of Arturo González Cruz’s term.
COURTESY PHOTO Karla Ruiz MacFarland will fill the last year of Arturo González Cruz’s term.
 ?? U-T FILE ?? Arturo González Cruz, who took office in October 2019, is stepping down as Tijuana mayor. He says it has nothing to do with Gov. Jaime Bonilla’s accusation­s that he’s involved in a killing.
U-T FILE Arturo González Cruz, who took office in October 2019, is stepping down as Tijuana mayor. He says it has nothing to do with Gov. Jaime Bonilla’s accusation­s that he’s involved in a killing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States