New Danger South of the Border?
STATE DEPARTMENT ISSUES WARNINGS TO TRAVELERS TO MEXICO JUST AHEAD OF SPRING BREAK 2023
PUBLIUS SPECIAL GUEST: Janet Sanders, is a successful U.S. financial software executive, who runs a travel advisory site that warns American travelers of the ongoing dangers and risks they will face while visiting Mexico.
Parents of students planning to ditch the books and hit the beaches of Mexico for spring break are being warned to change their vacation plans now and stop their kids from crossing the border due to major safety concerns.
As of last week, the U.S. State Department has issued its strongest possible “do not travel” warning for several Mexican states because of “crime and kidnapping”. Solo female travelers are especially advised to exercise increased caution in Mexico.
The popular tourist state of Quintana Roo once considered extremely safe, which includes Cancun, Playa Del Carmen, and Tulum, has been slapped with an “exercise increased caution” warning. 30 of Mexico’s 32 states have been flagged with warnings to travelers.
U.S. officials are warning that some resorts which had long been considered as being in safe areas are now being controlled by the Mexican drug cartels, who are not only selling drugs including deadly fentanyl to tourists but also using the resorts as money laundering facilities.
“There is a cartel presence in these resorts,” said Robert Almonte, a former U.S. Marshal in the western district of Texas.
Mexican travel expert Janet Sanders is available to speak from first-hand experience about the dangers of Mexican travel. The Colorado businesswoman and her husband were terrorized, held captive, and nearly killed by machete-wielding, gun-toting thugs who destroyed their belongings, killed their dogs, and more in the formerly safe resort city of Puerto Vallarta, before they were able to escape back to the United States earlier this year.
In that city, the U.S. Treasury Department is pursuing the case of Sergio Armando Orozco Rodriguez, also known as Puerto Vallarta cartel kingpin “Chocho” who extorts businesses for protection money in his hometown and launders drug proceeds through ties to nightclubs and restaurants along the city’s picturesque boardwalk.
Ask Janet Sanders about the very real dangers of traveling to Mexico for naïve spring breakers, why all U.S. vacationers but especially kids on spring break are particularly vulnerable in Mexico, and about her own harrowing story that has led her to oversee the travel danger website https://mexiknowinfo.com/while writing a book about her own experiences in Mexico.
BIO: Successful U.S. financial software executive Janet Sanders and her Mexican-American husband Joe moved to their “dream home” in the picturesque Yucatan peninsula, only to see her and her husband's dreams (along with most of their personal property) destroyed by cartel-like thugs who were protected by corrupt local police officials.
Now safely back in the United States, Janet Sanders is sounding the alarm via her travel advisory site https://www.mexiknowinfo.com, which is adding startling new accounts every day of increased risk to American citizens visiting Mexico.
Janet will tell her complete and harrowing story in a soon-to-be released book from award winning publisher Headline Books. Ms. Sanders hopes her story can be cautionary tale not only for American tourists and ex-pats, but also for government and border officials in both the U.S. and Mexico.
FIND HER WEBSITE HERE:
Janet Sanders, is a successful U.S. financial software executive, who runs a travel advisory site that warns American travelers of the ongoing dangers and risks they will face while visiting Mexico.