TIJUANA, Mexico - Two men were slain and hung  from a bridge, another was decapitated and a fourth was shot to death  over 24 hours in Tijuana, the latest gruesome killings in a Mexican  border city where hopes had risen that cartel violence was decreasing.
The  bodies of two men were found hanging from the Los Alamos bridge early  Friday, said Fermin Gomez, Baja California state's deputy attorney  general for organized crime.
Both  victims had their hands and feet bound and one had his head covered  with a black plastic bag. One of the bodies fell into traffic when the  rope broke.
A day earlier, a human head was found  underneath another bridge in Tijuana, which sits across from San Diego,  California. The body of the 24-year-old man was found 12 hours later  alongside the highway from Tijuana to the beach town of Ensenada.
Gomez  said the victim, Victor Ramirez, had recently been deported from the  United States, though he had no information on the circumstances.
Also  Thursday, a man was shot to death while leaving his house in the  exclusive Tijuana neighborhood of Chapultepec, and two other people were  wounded in a shootout on one of the city's main avenues.
Gomez blamed the killings on feuding between drug-dealing gangs, but declined to give details.
Beheadings,  massacres and body hangings had initially declined in Tijuana since the  January arrest of Teodoro "El Teo" Garcia Simental, one of two crime  bosses who had been waging a bloody turf war in the city.
President  Felipe Calderon even visited Tijuana last month and touted it as a  success story in his nearly four-year-old drug war, noting during a  festival to promote the city's industries that homicides are down from a  peak in 2008.
Days  after his visit, drug gangs started beheading rivals and hanging bodies  from bridges again. On Oct. 24, armed men burst into a Tijuana drug  rehab center and killed 13 recovering addicts.
Prosecutors  say they are investigating whether the rehab massacre was related to a  record seizure of nearly 135 tons of marijuana the previous week.
The  latest killings come two weeks after U.S. authorities made one of the  largest marijuana seizures in San Diego, confiscating more than 20 tons  of pot that was smuggled in through a tunnel connecting warehouses on  either side of the border. Mexican authorities seized more than four  tons of pot from the warehouse on their side of the border.
Meanwhile,  the lawyer for alleged drug kingpin Edgar "La Barbie" Valdez Villareal  said Friday that the Mexican government will not deport the U.S. citizen  for prosecution in the United States.
The  government considers Valdez, son of Mexican-born parents, a Mexican  national who must go through the more complicated extradition process to  be sent out of the country, attorney Kent Schaffer said.
Mexico  has increasingly extradited high-profile drug kingpins to the U.S.  under Calderon, a way to prevent them from running cartels from corrupt  Mexican prisons.
Mexican  officials in October extended a 40-day limit for holding Valdez without  charge and that expires after this weekend, so they must decide whether  to try him in Mexico.
Schaffer  said both he and the U.S. Justice Department want Valdez to be  prosecuted in the United States, where he is wanted on cocaine smuggling  charges in three states. Schaffer said an extradition request had yet  to be filed. U.S. Department of Justice officials could not be reached  late Friday.
The Mexican attorney general's office would say only that Valdez was still being held and the investigation continued.
Valdez, a former Texas high school football player, was arrested Aug. 30 by federal police on his ranch outside Mexico City.
Described  by authorities as a former ally of Mexico's most-wanted kingpin,  Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, Valdez allegedly had been fighting for  control of the notorious Beltran Leyva gang after Mexican marines killed  its leader in late 2009. The warring factions were responsible for  brutality and bloodshed from Cuernavaca south of Mexico City to the  state of Guerrero and the resort city of Acapulco on the Pacific coast.


 
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