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- NATION, Page 27Ameican NotesTHE BORDERYour Car Is My Car
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- A U.S. embassy official in Mexico City was startled to see
- his auto, which had been stolen there, cruising down a street
- in the capital. He was even more surprised when he caught up
- with the driver, who turned out to be a federal judge. The
- explanation is disturbing: according to a report in the San
- Diego Tribune, when Mexican authorities recover stolen
- vehicles, they sometimes put them to their own use. This is
- especially true, says the U.S. State Department, of automobiles
- stolen in the U.S. and driven across the border. One Mexican
- federal policeman reportedly paid thieves $1,000 for a 1989
- Chevy Blazer. Its normal resale price is $10,000.
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- Some 20,000 stolen vehicles reach Mexico from the U.S. each
- year; fewer than 3,500 are returned. When U.S. diplomats raise
- the subject, the Mexicans reply that they keep only cars used
- by drug dealers and point out that the U.S. also confiscates
- vehicles used in smuggling. That is not quite good enough for
- San Diego Congressman Duncan Hunter, who wants an outside
- inspection of every auto in Mexico's federal police motor pool.
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