JASON RANTZ

Congressman soliciting support for Renton woman imprisoned in Mexico

Jun 23, 2014, 11:19 AM | Updated: 2:39 pm

Nestora Salgado, has been detained since she was arrested Aug. 21, 2013 in the state of Guerrero, s...

Nestora Salgado, has been detained since she was arrested Aug. 21, 2013 in the state of Guerrero, south of Mexico City. (AP Photo/Courtesy Grisel Rodriguez)

(AP Photo/Courtesy Grisel Rodriguez)

U.S. Congressman Adam Smith (D-Wash) is speaking out on behalf of a Renton woman who’s been held in a Mexican prison for 10 months.

Smith tells KIRO Radio’s Jason Rantz that Nestora Salgado, a naturalized U.S. citizen from Renton, was trying to help fight crime in her old hometown in Mexico when she was arrested.

“It’s her home village where her family was from originally,” says Smith. “As in many places in Mexico, there is inadequate security. In fact, it’s in Mexican law that local citizens can form their own security, basically their own police force. So she was part of one of those, and they were trying to enforce the law.”

As Smith understands, Salgado was arrested when in one instance, the local citizens’ security group arrested some people for dealing drugs. Following those arrests, Smith says the state came in and arrested her for kidnapping, along with several other people who faced a variety of different charges. The family brought the case to Smith’s attention.

“I looked at the case. It is just horrific,” says Smith. “There’s been no due process. Basically, they violated all manner of different aspects of Mexican law and the federal courts in Mexico have ordered her release. The state courts have ignored it. It’s a gross human rights violation. We’ll do everything we can to try to get her free.”

Smith says the federal court in Mexico found that Salgado and the others were not acting outside of the law, and that it was part of their legal right to form this security force.

“It’s simply a matter of apparently the state did not like these local citizens taking control of security, and there is some sort of political difference there, I’m not sure what it was,” says Smith. “There’s really no legal justification whatsoever for this arrest, the federal courts of Mexico have made clear.”

Salgado was just trying to help clean up the community where she grew up, Smith says.

“With all the drug lords and everything going down in Mexico, communities have to work very, very hard to maintain peace and security,” says Smith. “She was down there helping her community try and have a better life.”

Smith says the whole situation is frustrating and he’s spoken to Salgado’s husband and daughter, and has a hard time imagining how difficult this must be for them.

“It’s frustrating, just as an outsider trying to help, to be part of her family and to witness this and see the incredible injustice and not be able to simply fix it. I can’t even imagine. It’s got to be beyond frustrating.”

Smith hopes that by bringing attention to the case, it will make the U.S. step up and put more pressure on the Mexican government.

“Thus far, they’ve only really made inquiries about it. They have not pushed it,” says Smith. “I understand, in general, the State Department’s approach is, U.S. citizens do get arrested abroad with some frequency and you have to respect the other country’s justice system, but to a point.

“When we’re at the point now where the other country’s justice system, the federal government, has said this is an unlawful imprisonment, it seems to me that we can be a little bit more aggressive, so that’s part of what we’re trying to do is keep putting pressure on the State Department to raise this issue.”

Smith says people can help put the pressure on by writing to their senators and writing their representatives in Congress.

“Let members of Congress know this is important so I can build more support to put pressure on the Mexican government,” says Smith.

Rantz thinks this is something everyone should get behind. “We have an American citizen who is unjustly being kept behind bars in Mexico, and something needs to be done.”

Jason Rantz on AM 770 KTTH
  • listen to jason rantzTune in to AM 770 KTTH weekdays at 3-7pm toThe Jason Rantz Show.

Jason Rantz Show

Jason Rantz

Burien lawsuit...

Jason Rantz

Exclusive: City of Burien sues King County for breaking contract in homeless camping ban

The City of Burien filed a lawsuit against King County for its refusal to enforce a homeless camping ban that was lawfully adopted.

14 hours ago

Image: The Stevens County Sheriff's Office says it recently received an odd call from a Sasquatch h...

Jason Rantz

Rantz: Sheriff’s office asked legality of hunting Sasquatch in Stevens County

A Sasquatch hunter had an interesting question for the Stevens County sheriff. Is it legal to hunt Sasquatch?

1 day ago

Image: Children bike past Wilson Elementary in Spokane....

Jason Rantz

Rantz: ‘Racist’ Spokane elementary school’s ‘slaves and hobos’ ignites controversy

After a teacher told students they could dress as "slaves and hobos" for an event, the Spokane NAACP cried foul.

2 days ago

Images: At left, Bellevue Police Department Officer Kevin Bereta is seen in his uniform. At right, ...

Julia Dallas

Bellevue officer injured in VP Harris motorcade recalls road to reclaiming benefits

Bellevue Police Officer Kevin Bereta's life changed while he was on VP Kamala Harris' service detail during her visit to Washington.

2 days ago

permanent supportive housing...

Jason Rantz

Rantz: You’re being lied to about permanent supportive housing in Redmond

Redmond residents rightly push back against permanent supportive housing as a solution for the homeless, as Seattle media get in the way.

3 days ago

WA State Attorney General Bob Ferguson campaigning.  (Photo by Karen Ducey/Getty Images)...

Jason Rantz

Rantz: On crime, Bob Ferguson campaign made its first massive blunder

The Bob Ferguson campaign wants you thinking his top priority is crime. His entire political history says otherwise.

4 days ago

Congressman soliciting support for Renton woman imprisoned in Mexico