"He Told Us He Liked the Killing... Like He Was Playing Grand Theft Auto"

November 16, 2007 (LPAC)--"We have to understand, these weren't murders being committed by illegal immigrants. These were executions, committed by American kids. They speak English, they play video games and they look just like any kid you'll see in the mall. They just chose to get into the life the cartel offered of money and drugs and violence," Assistant District Attorney of Webb County, Texas, Jesus Guillen, told the Dallas Morning News, after successfully prosecuting a 17-year-old contract killer who had carried out 30 murders for the drug cartels on both sides of the U.S.-Mexico border.

 Guillen's report to the Dallas Morning News, published November 10, on the case of Rosalio Reta, an American youth from Laredo, who carried out his first murder for the cartels when he was 13 years old, demonstrates just how close Britain's evil Revolution in Military Affairs project has brought us to Hell.

First: Reta and other adolescents in Texas were hired as contract killers. Members of several three-man cells were paid $500 a week each, just to standby for orders to kill when needed, by the drug cartel's enforcement arm, the Zetas. The Zetas themselves are a creation of the perversion of national armies: a former Special Forces, anti-drug unit of the Mexican military, trained at Fort Benning in the United States, which switched loyalties, to join the drug cartels.

Second: the adolescents described by the prosecutors were turned into narco-terrorist killers by playing video-games.

For example: Reta, who carried out his first contract hit when he was only 13, told prosecutors there was no thrill in it, because his victim was tied up and kneeling, and he only had to pick up a pistol and shoot him in the head. "He told us that wasn't his style. There was no challenge. He preferred to run surveillance on a victim, pick the right moment and surprise him. Like he was playing Grand Theft Auto," Guillen told the DMN.

"We talked to him for hours about what he had done, and he never once showed any remorse. The funny thing is, as you talk to him, you start liking him. He's just a 5-3, scrawny little kid. He's bright, engaging and funny. He comes from a good, hardworking family of nine kids. Nothing in his background screams out 'criminal.'

"Half of you thinks, 'what a tragedy at so many levels this kid is.' But the other half looks at what he's done and you think there's something evil at work, that somehow, the morality switch never got turned on."

"He told us he liked the killing. It didn't make him sick. He liked it," Guillen said.