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"I think it gave him an opening," said Bruce Merrill, a longtime pollster and retired Arizona State University journalism professor. Goddard can now play the debate clips over and over as he attacks her competence to lead Arizona. In fact, there have been beheadings in Mexico in violence associated with criminal cartels that include those active in cross-border smuggling. And some violence has spilled over the border, including the March slaying of a southern Arizona rancher, Robert Krentz. Law enforcement officials have said they believe Krentz was killed by an illegal immigrant, likely a scout for drug smugglers. But none of the southern Arizona coroners who handle immigrant cases have seen headless bodies. Pima County's Dr. Eric Peters said some people might be confused when just skulls are sometimes found in the desert, but that's because of decomposition and animals that feed off bodies. He said it'd be clear if any one of those skulls had been severed from a body. "You would find what we would call tool marks because you need to use some sort of tool to forcibly remove someone's head from the spine," he said. "You'd see saw marks," even on skulls that have long been in the desert. A Republican legislator who was the prime sponsor of Arizona's immigration law said Brewer's critics were just playing games and ignoring the real issue
-- violence bleeding across the border into the United States. "I can tell you there's been 300 to 500 beheadings and dismemberments along that border," state Sen. Russell Pearce said Thursday. "It is a national security concern, yet we're worried about this game-playing, this word-smithing."
[Associated
Press;
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