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Mayor-elect pulled off bus and assassinated near resort city of Acapulco
The mayor-elect of a small municipality near the crime-plagued Mexican resort city of Acapulco was assassinated early Monday, local prosecutors said — the latest in a series of attacks targeting politicians.
Salvador Villalba Flores — who was to take office in October in Copala, a town of about 4,000 residents about 80 miles southeast of Acapulco — was shot dead while traveling on a highway, prosecutors in Guerrero state said in a statement.
Prosecutors said that they had launched an investigation into the murder, but declined to provide further details.
Local newspaper El Sur de Guerrero reported that Villalba was a retired Navy captain who was usually protected by National Guard escorts, but was traveling alone to Mexico City when he was killed.
“The mayor-elect was taken off the bus he was traveling on when it stopped near San Pedro las Playas” and shot, the outlet reported.
Local media also reported Villalba had decided to run for mayor after his friend, a candidate, was murdered in June 2023.
In Mexico’s general election on June 2, leftist Claudia Sheinbaum was elected by an overwhelming majority as the first woman president of the country.
As well as choosing a new president, Mexicans voted for members of Congress, several state governors and myriad local officials — a total of more than 20,000 positions.
Since Mexico’s campaign season began last September, more than two dozen political candidates have been killed, according to Data Civica, a non-governmental organization.
Earlier this month, a local councilwoman was gunned down as she was leaving her home Guerrero. Her murder came a few days after the mayor of a town in western Mexico and her bodyguard were killed outside of a gym — just hours after Sheinbaum won the presidency.
Acapulco was once a playground for the rich and famous, but it has lost its luster in the last decade as foreign tourists have been spooked by bloodshed that has made it one of the world’s most violent cities.
Last month, five people were killed in an armed attack in Acapulco, just three days after 10 other bodies were found in the resort city.
Guerrero, one of the states most affected by drug cartel violence given its location along Mexico’s Pacific coast, recorded 1,890 murders in 2023.
More than 450,000 people have been murdered and thousands have gone missing since the Mexican government deployed the army to combat drug trafficking in 2006.
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Sen. Elizabeth Warren pushes bill to make it easier and cheaper to file for bankruptcy
Continuing a decades-long effort to change the nation’s bankruptcy system, Sen. Elizabeth Warren plans to propose legislation on Wednesday aimed at making the process less costly and complicated for the hundreds of thousands of individuals who seek court-sanctioned relief from debt each year.
“People typically file for bankruptcy for one of three reasons: a job loss, a medical problem or a family breakup — and when they do, they’re faced with an expensive and complicated system,” the Massachusetts Democrat said in a statement in reintroducing the bill, known as the “Consumer Bankruptcy Reform Act.”
“My bill would simplify and modernize the consumer bankruptcy system to make it easier and less expensive for people to get relief,” Warren added.
Bankruptcies rising
The measure comes as personal bankruptcies compared this year with 2023 levels. More than 400,000 Americans have filed for bankruptcy in 2024, although that figure is far below their pre-pandemic average of about 750,000 personal bankruptcy filings a year.
Warren said her bill would help families “avoid eviction, keep homes and cars and discharge local government fines.” It would also create a repayment plan for unsecured debt, including student loans, as well as eliminate a restriction that bars people from shedding private and public student debt in bankruptcy, like other types of consumer loans.
Rep. Nadler, a New York Democrat, and Rep. Pramila Jayapal, a Democrat from Washington, are co-leading a House version of the bill, while Rhode Island Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse will cosponsor the measure in the Senate. The bill has been endorsed by a wide range of groups including the AFL-CIO, a labor union, and consumer advocacy groups Public Citizen and National Consumer Law Center.
“Big corporate debtors continue to reap the rewards of our broken bankruptcy system while everyday Rhode Islanders facing financial hardship struggle to obtain basic relief. I’m pleased to support this bill that makes the consumer bankruptcy system fairer and easier to access for those facing crushing personal debt,” Whitehouse said in a statement.
Among other things, Warren’s proposal would provide two routes for individuals to file for bankruptcy:
- No-payment discharge. For low-income filers, this option would wipe out unsecured debt other than child support or debts incurred by fraud.
- Debt-specific plans. This would let individuals resolve debts specific to their financial situation, pausing debt collection efforts paused while filer remains current on loans.
The change would be a welcome one, according to advocates, who say the current bankruptcy rules can steer people in the wrong direction.
It costs about $1,500 to file Chapter 7, and most attorneys require that their fees be paid upfront. Chapter 7 is a liquidation bankruptcy, where the filer’s nonexempt property and assets — possessions not protected by bankruptcy — are turned over to a trustee, and debt is discharged in three to six months.
With a Chapter 13 bankruptcy, payments can be spread out, but the overall costs for filers is significantly higher, running an average of $4,500. Only about a third of people who file Chapter 13 make it to the end and have their debts discharged, research shows.
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2 parents, 3 young children found dead inside Utah home; teen hospitalized with gunshot wound
Five family members including three children were found dead in a home in Utah on Tuesday, and another, age 17, was taken to a hospital with a gunshot wound, police said.
The dead were two adults, an 11-year-old boy, and two girls ages 9 and 2, according to Roxeanne Vainuku, a spokesperson for the West Valley City Police Department. It was not immediately clear how they died.
They were found in the house in West Valley City, about 9 miles southwest of Salt Lake City. The teen was discovered in the garage.
“Absolutely horrific. This is something that certainly will weigh heavily on investigators in this case,” Vainuku said at a nighttime news conference.
Authorities do not believe there is a suspect on the loose, and the shooting is something that was “isolated to this home,” she added
Because the 17-year-old “is injured and he’s in the hospital, there are some challenges in communicating with him and finding out more information,” Vainuku said.
“In any case where people have died, loved ones have been lost, we want to make sure that we do the most absolute thorough job possible so that we can bring justice to the victims,” Vainuku said, according to CBS affiliate KUTV.
A relative alerted police Monday after unsuccessfully trying to reach the 38-year-old woman who lived in the home, authorities said. Officers went to the house, but no one answered.
They came back on Tuesday afternoon after the same relative reported finding the 17-year-old in the garage.
Police are investigating inside the home and have also been talking with neighbors and looking for evidence from things like doorbell cameras, Vainuku said.
“Officers also have canvassed the neighborhood gathering information and any video evidence,” police said in a statement.
CBS affiliate KUTV reported that some neighbors said the family had been living in that house for three or four years.