Seven bodies were found Oct. 31 in a mass grave in Nogales, Arizona’s largest border city. According to a Fox News report, the city’s mayor, José Angel Hernandez, related that officers recovered six bodies and a severed head in a riverbed; a seventh headless body was found nearby.
Though the report did not attribute the deaths to drug-related activity, the bodies were found in an area of the state so well known for border violence that the National Parks have posted signs warning visitors that the area is unsafe.
On Nov. 1, the day after the discovery of the seven bodies, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer appeared in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to defend the state’s new immigration law, S.B. 1070, which addresses the state’s growing problems of drug-related crimes and an increase in undocumented alien traffic which have caused border violence to spiral out of control.
Governor Brewer and her lawyers faced a panel of 3 judges who questioned the way the law was carried out. Justice Department lawyers say parts of the state law are unconstitutional and would interfere with federal law enforcement.
Though the report did not attribute the deaths to drug-related activity, the bodies were found in an area of the state so well known for border violence that the National Parks have posted signs warning visitors that the area is unsafe.
On Nov. 1, the day after the discovery of the seven bodies, Arizona Governor Jan Brewer appeared in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco to defend the state’s new immigration law, S.B. 1070, which addresses the state’s growing problems of drug-related crimes and an increase in undocumented alien traffic which have caused border violence to spiral out of control.
Governor Brewer and her lawyers faced a panel of 3 judges who questioned the way the law was carried out. Justice Department lawyers say parts of the state law are unconstitutional and would interfere with federal law enforcement.
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