-
Posted: 5/31/2013 3:10:01 AM EST
FILE - In a file photo provided by the Maldonado family Gary and Yanira Maldonado are shown in 2012. Yanira Maldonado, jailed in Mexico on a drug-smuggling charge, was released late Thursday night, May 30, 2013, after court officials reviewed her case. Maldonado was arrested by the Mexican military last week after they found nearly 12 pounds (5.4 kilograms) of pot under her seat on the commercial bus traveling from Mexico to Arizona. (AP Photo/Maldonado Family, File)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 9:08:16 PM EST
Friends put pictures in the bar entrance of their recently disappeared relatives in Mexico City,Thursday, May 30, 2013. Relatives who joined a march to demand solutions to the thousands of detained and disappeared in Mexico say 11 young people were kidnapped in broad daylight from a Mexico City bar last Sunday a half-block from the city's main boulevard and a few blocks from police headquarters. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 6:56:18 PM EST
A member of Amnesty International attends a demonstration outside the El Salvador embassy in Mexico City, May 29, 2013, in support of a 22-year-old Salvadoran woman identified as Beatriz, who is seeking an abortion. REUTERS/Henry Romero
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 6:56:18 PM EST
Members of Amnesty International and civil organizations hold up placards during a demonstration outside the El Salvador embassy in Mexico City, May 29, 2013, in support of a 22-year-old Salvadoran woman identified as Beatriz, who is seeking an abortion. REUTERS/Henry Romero
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 6:44:59 PM EST
Former President of Mexico Vicente Fox (L) talks during a news conference next to marijuana entrepreneur and CEO of Diego Pellicer Inc. Jamen Shively (R) in Seattle, Washington, May 30, 2013. REUTERS/Marcus Donner
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:40:58 PM EST
A woman holds up a sign with details of her recently disappeared relative during a protest in Mexico City, Thursday, May 30, 2013. Eleven young people were kidnapped in broad daylight from a Mexico City bar, just 20 days after the grandson of civil rights leader Malcolm X was beaten to death at a nightclub in the capital, anguished relatives said Thursday. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:40:58 PM EST
A woman holds up a sign with details of her recently disappeared relative during a protest in Mexico City, Thursday, May 30, 2013. Eleven young people were kidnapped in broad daylight from a Mexico City bar, just 20 days after the grandson of civil rights leader Malcolm X was beaten to death at a nightclub in the capital, anguished relatives said Thursday. The sign reads in Spanish "Looking for Said Sanches, 19-years-old, 1.85 meters, has not been seen since Saturday in Zona Rosa in Heaven." The mother of one of the missing youths says 11 people in all vanished from the after-hours club about 1 ½ blocks from the U.S. embassy, on the other side of Reforma Avenue. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:40:58 PM EST
A man holds up a sign with details of his recently disappeared relative during a protest in Mexico City, Thursday, May 30, 2013. Eleven young people were kidnapped in broad daylight from a Mexico City bar, just 20 days after the grandson of civil rights leader Malcolm X was beaten to death at a nightclub in the capital, anguished relatives said Thursday. The sign reads in Spanish "Help us find him. Rafael Rojas Marines. Disappeared in the after-hours Heaven. Asking for your support!" The mother of one of the missing youths says 11 people in all vanished from the after-hours club about 1 ½ blocks from the U.S. embassy, on the other side of Reforma Avenue. (AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:35:14 PM EST
Friends and family acquaintances watch a video presentation about Malcolm Latif Shabazz, during his memorial service at First Corinthian Baptist Church on Thursday, May 30, 2013 in the Harlem section of New York. Scores gathered to remember Shabazz, 28, the late grandson of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X, who authorities say was beaten to death in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:35:14 PM EST
Malaak Shabazz, center, reacts as she looks at a program image of her nephew Malcolm Latif Shabazz, during his memorial service at the First Corinthian Baptist Church on Thursday, May 30, 2013 in Harlem, N.Y. Scores gathered to remember Shabazz, 28, the late grandson of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X, who authorities say was beaten to death in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:35:14 PM EST
Nadia Gourzong becomes emotional as she recall time spent with her cousin, Malcolm Latif Shabazz, during his memorial service at the First Corinthian Baptist Church on Thursday, May 30, 2013 in the Harlem section of New York. Scores gathered to remember Shabazz, 28, the late grandson of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X, who authorities say was beaten to death in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:35:14 PM EST
Friends and family acquaintances listen during a memorial service for Malcolm Latif Shabazz at First Corinthian Baptist Church on Thursday, May 30, 2013 in the Harlem section of New York. Scores gathered to remember Shabazz, 28, the late grandson of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X, who authorities say was beaten to death in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 5:35:14 PM EST
Author and social activist Sister Souljah gestures as she speaks during a memorial service for Malcolm Latif Shabazz at First Corinthian Baptist Church on Thursday, May 30, 2013 in the Harlem section of New York. Scores gathered to remember Shabazz, 28, the late grandson of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X, who authorities say was beaten to death in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
-
Posted: 5/30/2013 3:22:13 PM EST
The Sheps Hetep drummers, left, play as the family of Malcolm Latif Shabazz, including his aunts Malaak Shabazz, seated fifth from right, and Ilyasah Shabazz, fourth from right, arrive for his memorial service at the First Corinthian Baptist Church on Thursday, May 30, 2013 in the Harlem section of New York. Scores gathered to remember Shabazz, 28, the late grandson of slain civil rights leader Malcolm X, who authorities say was beaten to death in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
-
Posted: 5/29/2013 5:59:41 PM EST
In a photo provided by the Maldonado family Gary and Yanira Maldonado are shown in 2012. The arrest of Yanira Maldonado, 42, has prompted outrage in the U.S. among politicians and her family members, who say she was set up when her bus was stopped at a military checkpoint last week and authorities found nearly 12 pounds of marijuana under her seat. She was immediately sent to a Mexico prison. (AP Photo/Maldonado Family)
-
Posted: 5/29/2013 5:59:41 PM EST
In a photo provided by the Maldonado family Gary and Yanira Maldonado are shown in 2012. The arrest of Yanira Maldonado, 42, has prompted outrage in the U.S. among politicians and her family members, who say she was set up when her bus was stopped at a military checkpoint last week and authorities found nearly 12 pounds of marijuana under her seat. She was immediately sent to a Mexico prison. (AP Photo/Maldonado Family)
-
Posted: 5/28/2013 6:07:38 AM EST
Edgar Yepez takes a photo among 7,000 American flags on display outside the Long Center in Austin, Texas, on Memorial Day, Monday, May 27, 2013. The flags are in honor of the fallen veterans of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The display was organized by Operation Honor Our Heroes, an organization that was founded by Nancy Glass after her friend MSG Robert M. Horrigan was killed in Iraq in 2005. "I feel very honored to be part of this celebration," said Yepez, 28, who was born in Mexico to a Mexican mother and Pakistani father. (AP Photo/Austin American-Statesman, Jay Janner)
-
Posted: 5/25/2013 7:15:29 PM EST
U.S. midfielder Robbie Rogers (16) is pulled down by Mexico defender Gerardo Torrado during the second half of their friendly soccer match in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 10, 2011. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer
-
Posted: 5/25/2013 5:26:38 PM EST
U.S. midfielder Robbie Rogers (16) is pulled down by Mexico defender Gerardo Torrado during the second half of their friendly soccer match in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 10, 2011. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer
-
Posted: 5/25/2013 5:08:43 PM EST
U.S. midfielder Robbie Rogers (16) is pulled down by Mexico defender Gerardo Torrado during the second half of their friendly soccer match in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, August 10, 2011. REUTERS/Tim Shaffer