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Torres defends the rosy picture of police work. "Obviously if police are going to give you support, you have to show their point of view in a way that doesn't insult the institution," he said. Public Safety Secretary Genaro Garcia Luna did not want to comment on the TV show, said spokesman Jose Ramon Salinas, citing the anti-corruption complaint. But Garcia Luna recently told station Radio Formula that the series is an "important way to interface with the community." Agents in the series often echo the department's public relations messages, including those encouraging crime victims to call police: "With no report, we can't formally respond," the actors say. Many Mexicans say they don't report crimes to authorities, fearing they may be speaking to the criminals themselves. Active-duty and former police officers are also caught when officials break up kidnapping or drug gangs. When Calderon recently celebrated Mexico's first Day of the Police, he asked for hard and honest work from the officers and respect for police forces from the public. "We need to transform our police, but we also need to recognize the honor, responsibility and vocation of our good police," he said. Torres said his show may lure more young people to join the force because many Mexicans aspire to be like characters in soap operas. It happened before, Torres said. In the late 1980s, after he filmed a music video showing Mexican crooner Luis Miguel as a cadet, young men wanted to enlist in the military. Army officials could not confirm whether recruitment changed in those years. But so far, there are no plans for a second season. In fact, the police series was outperformed by another soap opera, Telemundo's "La Reina del Sur" or "Queen of the South," which chronicles the rise of a Mexican female drug trafficker. Mexicans may still be more inclined to believe that a beautiful young woman can become a dangerous outlaw than that their country can be protected by a reliable police force.
[Associated
Press;
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