AP/ February 6, 2013, 4:42 PM

Acapulco gang rape: One woman "saved by the fact that she is Mexican," authorities say

State police stand at a roadblock due to stepped up security after masked armed men broke into a beach home, raping six Spanish tourists who had rented the house in Acapulco, Mexico, Tuesday Feb. 5, 2013.

State police stand at a roadblock due to stepped up security after masked armed men broke into a beach home, raping six Spanish tourists who had rented the house in Acapulco, Mexico, Tuesday Feb. 5, 2013. / AP Photo/Bernandino Hernandez

ACAPULCO, Mexico Armed, masked men who raped six Spanish tourists in the Mexican resort of Acapulco spared the lone Mexican woman in the group because of her nationality, adding yet another macabre twist to the case that has further hurt the resort's already battered reputation.

It was unclear whether the group of 12 Spaniards who fell prey to the attack had been targeted because of their nationality in the three-hour ordeal at a rented house on a tranquil beach dotted with restaurants, small hotels and rental homes. Most of the six men and six women live in Mexico City and were vacationing in Acapulco.

The five attackers burst into the house and held the group at gunpoint, said Acapulco Mayor Luis Walton. They tied up the six men with phone cords and bathing suit straps and then raped the six Spanish women.

Walton said the Spaniards had been "escorted," apparently under police protection, out of Acapulco on Tuesday.

Guerrero state Attorney General Martha Garzon told local media that the attackers' motive was "robbery, and to have fun," and they drank mescal they found at the house after committing the rapes. The lone Mexican woman, who's married to one of the Spaniards, "was saved by the fact that she is Mexican."

Police investigators work to obtain fingerprints on a door at the home where masked, armed men broke in, in Acapulco, Mexico, Tuesday Feb. 5, 2013. According to the mayor of Acapulco, five masked men burst into this house that Spanish tourists had rented on the outskirts of Acapulco, in a low-key area near the beach, and held a group of six Spanish men and one Mexican woman at gunpoint, while they raped the six Spanish women before dawn on Monday.

Police investigators work to obtain fingerprints on a door at the home where masked, armed men broke in, in Acapulco, Mexico, Feb. 5, 2013.

/ AP Photo/Bernandino Hernandez

"She says she identified herself to the (attackers) and asked not to be raped, and they told her that she had passed the test by being Mexican and they didn't touch her," Garzon told Radio Formula. While some Mexicans harbor resentment against Spaniards dating to colonial times, the Spaniards may have been targeted for other reasons, like their appearance or possessions.

Authorities and residents of Acapulco struggled to come to terms with the attack and its near-certain effect on the area's tourism industry, amid concerns that such violence could affect the draw of other, safer Mexican resorts.

Walton rushed to apologize Wednesday for his comment from Monday that "this happens everywhere in the world, not just in Acapulco or in Mexico."

"I apologize for having said that," he said Wednesday. "Of course this worries us and we don't want anything like this to happen in Acapulco or anywhere else in the world."

He added, "We know this is going to affect our tourism."

It's not clear how much interest there was in Acapulco among international tourists even before the Monday attacks, despite a major effort announced last year by business magnate Carlos Slim, the world's richest man, to rescue Acapulco by building parks and recreational centers.

Oceania and Regent Seven Seas Cruises, some of the last lines making port calls at Acapulco, cancelled them in December, the company confirmed.

The violence has included drug gang shootouts along the resort's main coastal boulevard and the dumping of severed heads on city streets.

But the early Monday attack exposed a security situation so bad that horrific violence was possible even in areas that appear relatively safe, like the laid-back stretch of beach southeast of the city's center where the Spaniards rented the house.

The manager of a small hotel near the house said he heard shouting during the attack just after midnight Monday, but did nothing because he felt it would be too dangerous. The man did want to give his name for safety reasons.

Other Mexican resorts continue to welcome tens of millions of international visitors every year, even as foreign tourism has largely vanished in Acapulco. Some feared the chilling effect of Monday's attack will be felt elsewhere.

"We are definitely not as contaminated with the crime issue as other states in Mexico," said Juan Carlos Gonzalez, tourism secretary of Quintana Roo, the Caribbean coast state where Cancun is located and which hosted about 17 million tourists last year. "We are really sorry about what happened with the Spanish tourists ... because in one way or another, it is something that affects Mexico's image."

"Apart from the illegal activities that occur between drug gangs, the idea that they would attack some tourist, that would hurt all the efforts we are making."

He said his state "certainly could have some cancellations, but given the number of Spanish tourists, it would not be significant."

Rafael Gallego Nadal, president of the Spanish Confederation of Travel Agencies, said the vast majority of the 50,000 Spaniards who head to Mexico every year travel to the Caribbean coast — and not to the Acapulco area that has been beset by drug violence for decades.

"This was a terrible attack but it's not the first time that something bad has happened in that part of Mexico. We Spaniards go to the Mexican Riviera" in and around Cancun, he said. "For us, this is an incredibly safe zone."

Gallego noted that most members of the group attacked are believed to be Spaniards living in Mexico City, and that Acapulco is a much bigger draw for domestic Mexican tourism than it is for international visitors.

Many Spaniards will go to Mexico during the long Easter Week vacation, and Gallego said he's heard no talk from travel agencies or groups about reducing package tour prices because of the rapes.

Kathy Gerhardt, a spokeswoman for Travel Leaders, a network of independently owned and operated travel agencies in the U.S., said events in Acapulco barely registers on U.S. tourists' radar anymore. "Those individuals trying to lump Acapulco into the list of top Mexico destinations U.S. travelers visit are misinformed. It has been decades since it was a hot tourist destination; today it is more of a destination for Mexican nationals rather than U.S. tourists."

In the group's recent survey of over 1,000 travel agency owner, managers and agents, "not a single individual chose Acapulco as a top international destination they are booking for their clients," Gerhardt wrote in an email, adding "we do not see any `spillover effect"' for areas like Cancun, which Travel Leaders lists as the number-two foreign destination for U.S. travelers, after Caribbean island cruises.

Gallego said it's important for Mexican authorities to make arrests soon to prove that they can punish those responsible. Garzon, the state prosecutor, said "we have strong evidence to lead us to those responsible for this reprehensible act."

Acapulco is the granddaddy of Mexican resorts. Elizabeth Taylor was married there, John F. and Jackie Kennedy came on their honeymoon, and Howard Hughes spent his later years hiding out in a suite at the Princess Hotel, a pyramid-shaped icon in the exclusive Punta Diamante, or Diamond Point, zone.

Beheadings and drug gang shootouts, some on the city's main seaside boulevard, became more frequent after 2006, as gangs fought for control of the city's drug and extortion business.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
24 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sOLDIER_pOET says:
I didn't hear this news Why some men who wear the uniform become brutal stupid and ignorant people? U wear the uniform to protect not to rape and kill innocence people And this seems to happen all over the world No matter the country No matter the city Shame Gon Come
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
TIGHTPAT says:
RIGHT NOW I AM PACKING MY STUFF TO MOVE THERE, I MUST GET OUT OF THIS PLACE IT IS TERRIBLE. LAST NIGHT WE GOT TWO FEET OF SNOW AND NOW WE CAN'T GO NO WHERE. YHE TOWN ISN'T DOING ANY PLOWING, IT'S BEEN 13 HOURS SINSE THE SNOW STOPPED AND NONE OF THE STREETS ARE PLOWED YET!!THIS PLACE SUCKS!! PLEASE DON'T MOVE HERE- PORT JEFFERSON STATION N.Y. ON LONG ISLAND SO ME AND MY FAT MEXICAN WIFE AND HER 7 KIDS ARE GOING SOUTH TO MEXICO, THEY ARE GOING HOME AND I WILL BE VISITING,, HOPE I DON'T GET RAPED
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
TIGHTPAT says:
THE ******* THAT WASN'T RAPED WAS BECAUSE SHE WAS TO FAT AND ALREADY HAD 7 KIDS. THAT ***** WAS STANK!!! I NO BECAUSE I AM MARRIED TO A FAT MEXICAN THAT HAS 7 KIDS AND HER ***** IS STANKKKKKKK
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
zorroaca44 says:
Leads me to recall when two men entered a house on the east coast of the United States and tied up the father ... took the wife to the ATM for money, and raped their two teenage daughters and then set their bed on fire and killed them!!!!!

Makes me wonder why this incident was not made to reflect on the whole of the U.S. like they always do with Mexico??????
reply
TIGHTPAT replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
ELL ZORRO THE REASON IS AMERICA IS A RACIST COUNTRY LIKE THE REST OF THE WORLD!!BUT WE ARE STILL THE BEST COUNTRY OUT THERE, SO TRY TO MAKE IT BETTER AND SEE WHAT HAPPENS-GOOD LUCK
linkicon reporticon emailicon
dylan_89 says:
can you really consider Mexicans racist when they hate other Hispanics from different countries or is that kind of like the self hating blacks out there?
reply
JMG4314 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
well to be technical Mexicans are considered Latino, not Hispanice.
TIGHTPAT replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
YEA YOU CAN BECAUSE WE ALL HATE TOO
linkicon reporticon emailicon
Bojax39 says:
"Acapulco gang rape: One woman "saved by the fact that she is Mexican,"

Yeah and many illegals here in the US are spared deportation for the same reason....
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
MIO42 says:
http://www.torontosun.com/2013/02/06/girl-9-gives-birth-in-mexico
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
mnollette says:
sure, she's too fat.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
skithebumps says:
Come to sunny Acapulco. Not.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
just_responding says:
Anyone who thinks that owning a gun is going to save you in a situation like this is a fool. They were on VACATION! If you think you sleep on vacation with a gun next to you or sit around relaxing and talking to your friends with a glass of wine in one hand and a gun in the other is a total weirdo.
reply
Bojax39 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
just_responding says: "If you think you sleep on vacation with a gun next to you or sit around relaxing and talking to your friends with a glass of wine in one hand and a gun in the other is a total weirdo."

And any moron who uses this article for a rant about gun control is weirder yet.....
JMG4314 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
uh if a tourist gets busted with a gun in Mexico they will be sitting in rat infested jail for a very very long time.
See all 24 Comments