4 seized Americans crossed into Mexico to buy medication, Mexican president says Natalie Neysa Alund Thao Nguyen
Four American residents were attacked and seized by unidentified shooters subsequent to crossing into Mexico last week to purchase medication, Mexican authorities said Monday.
Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Monday the four Americans planned to purchase medication and that "there was a showdown among gatherings, and they were confined."
U.S. Envoy to Mexico Ken Salazar said in an explanation the Americans were grabbed at gunpoint and an "guiltless" Mexican resident kicked the bucket in the assault. He said different U.S. equity offices were working with their Mexican partners to recuperate the missing people.
Specialists have given no different insights regarding the people in question.
The Americans went under gunfire from the men soon after getting the line on Friday through the city of Matamoros, in the Tamaulipas state, opposite Brownsville, Texas, Specialist Oliver Rich, who is responsible for the FBI's San Antonio Division, reported Sunday.
The casualties crossed into Mexico driving a white minivan with North Carolina tags, the FBI said. Not long after, the shooters terminated upon the travelers in the vehicle, and the four Americans were set in one more vehicle and taken from the scene by the men.

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