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3-Year-Old Girl Killed After Family Allegedly Found Cocaine Washed Up on Beach


Cocaine left in the ocean by drug cartels washing ashore in the tourist islands of Belize has caused deadly wars between Bloods and Crips gangs for years. The child was one of three people killed.

A three-year-old girl, her father, and another man were killed in a hail of bullets in the popular Belizean tourist destination of San Pedro this week. 

Authorities said that they believed the grizzly murders on October 23 may be linked to what locals have long referred to as the “sea lotto” — parcels of cocaine that wash ashore of Ambergris Caye, the island where San Pedro is located, and are found by locals.

The stray packages are believed to be “wet dropped” by drug cartels in international waters off the coast of Central America along strategically chosen sea patterns that move towards their counterparts in Mexico, who collect the product and smuggle the drugs north. Occasionally, because of changing tides and weather conditions, bricks get lost and end up on the isolated beaches of the northern tip of Ambergris Caye just a short distance from Mexico’s southern border. The hunt for the “sea lotto” has led to murders on the Belizean island for over a decade.

The child Amari Rodriguez was with her father, mother, and two other men, driving in a golf cart along a dimly lit road that straddles a local lagoon in the San Pedrito neighborhood shortly after midnight when two people emerged shooting from nearby mangroves. Her father, Delmar Rodriguez, died at the scene of the crime, along with a man named Саrlоѕ Сhі. Her mother, Karla Cordova, reportedly told police that she and the third man, Leonel Cornejo, brought the wounded child to the hospital on the golf cart after realizing she had also been shot. Amari Rodriguez was pronounced dead upon arrival. 

Police announced they were looking for two men in relation to the massacre, named as Сhrіѕtіаn Еѕраt аnd Місhаеl Вrоwn. Both were reportedly in police custody just a week prior to the killing but were released. Brown turned himself in to authorities on Tuesday. Espat’s name has also come up in relation to other unsolved crimes including a double murder of an American doctor on vacation in San Pedro and his local fly fishing tour guide in 2019. 

Belize’s Police Соmmіѕѕіоnеr Сhеѕtеr Wіllіаmѕ told local media in a press briefing that initial investigations suggested a parcel of drugs may have led to a dispute between one of the deceased individuals and Espat, who was reportedly a close affiliate. The commissioner said that authorities believed the motive was a drug brick that the group discovered that wasn’t “equitably shared” and led to the beef.

After publishing the commissioner’s theory, local news outlet Belize Breaking News reportedly received a short video of the wanted Espat, where he denied being involved in the murders, or having any “mіѕundеrѕtаndіng аnd nо рrоblеm wіth Dеlmаr Rоdrіguеz.”

“І nеvеr threatened hіm nоr hіѕ fаmіlу, wоrѕе hаvе аnу drug-rеlаtеd соnflісt wіth hіm,” he said.

Espat reportedly went on to claim that he was tortured by the police while held a week previously, and was not hiding from arrest, but had left the island to seek medical help for his injuries at the hands of the cops. Espat remains at large.

San Pedro has long been one of Belize’s premier locations for tourism and foreign investment, and even was the inspiration behind the popular 1986 Madonna song “La Isla Bonita.” But murders connected to the “sea lotto” and other gang activity are not uncommon on the island and have happened relatively frequently for over a decade. A 2014 VICE News investigation about a series of killings connected to wet drops linked the issue to a feud between rival Bloods and Crips sets on the island.

Outside of the United States, Belize arguably has the most prominent Bloods and Crips gang culture in the world. It began in the 80s with the deportations of Belizean Bloods and Crips members from the U.S. back to the Central American nation, then proliferated as gang lifestyles became popular in depictions in film and music in the 90s. But over the years the gangs fragmented into dozens of different regional groups around the country identifying as either red or blue, with allegiances mostly boiling down to the handful of blocks where the gang members were born. Now, Bloods fight Bloods and Crips fight Crips around the country over low-level drug dealing and control of minor rackets like the “sea lotto” in San Pedro.

Williams urged locals to stop searching for the cocaine lottery in Ambergris Caye.

Source : Vice

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