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Gonzalez said he has not received a response. Cuellar, a Texas Democrat joined by two other area congressmen, said Mexico was "doing the best that they can." Martin Cuellar, sheriff of nearby Webb County and the congressman's brother, said Mexico started searching for Hartley on Friday, the day after the call about the shooting came in. Ruben Rios, a spokesman for the Tamaulipas state prosecutor's office, said Tamaulipas authorities have not opened an investigation into Hartley's death because they don't have a formal complaint. "There isn't a complaint, there isn't a body, we don't have anything to go on and open an investigation," he said. Henry Cuellar released briefing papers shortly before a joint U.S.-Mexico news conference that said U.S. consular officers had accompanied Tiffany Hartley to the Mexican consulate in McAllen, Texas, to file a Mexican federal complaint. But no complaint with state authorities had been filed that would trigger a local murder investigation. Drug war violence has spread in the last few months from Ciudad Juarez, the epicenter of Mexico's drug war across from El Paso, Texas, to the Gulf Coast region of Mexico, including Tamaulipas state where Hartley reportedly disappeared. Two drug gangs, the Gulf Cartel and the Zetas, are battling for supremacy there and fighting the Mexican military.
[Associated
Press;
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