Gangs blamed for killing 3 with US consulate ties

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Soldiers stand guard at a crime scene where the crashed car of a US consulate employee sits in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Sunday. (AP photo)
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CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) — Suspected drug gangsters chased down and opened fire on two white SUVs carrying families of U.S. consular employees from a children's party, killing three adults and and injuring two children in this violent border city, officials said Monday.

An infant in a car seat survived a burst of bullets that killed her American parents.

The FBI announced it was aiding Mexico's federal Attorney General's Office in probing the slayings that alarmed both the White House and Mexico's presidency as the surging bloodshed along Mexico's border struck the families of U.S. government employees.

Mexican authorities put suspicion on the Aztecas street gang — a group allied with the "La Linea" enforcement arm of the Juarez drug cartel. They said that was based on "information exchanged with U.S. federal agencies."

But the reason for the attacks remained unclear.

All three victims had attended a children's party hosted by another consular employee shortly before the attacks, said the FBI spokeswoman in El Paso, Andrea Simmons.

"There is no information that the victims were specifically targeted" because of their work with the U.S. Consulate, she said, though the investigation is continuing.

Both the American couple and the Mexican man who was killed were traveling in similar vehicles — white sport utility vehicles.

The U.S. consulate in Ciudad Juarez, shut for Monday's Mexican national holiday, also will be closed on Tuesday as "a way for the community to mourn the loss" of the victims, said consulate spokesman Silvio Gonzalez. It was the second U.S. border consulate closed because of violence in the last month. The consular office in Reynosa, across from McAllen, Texas closed for several days in late February because of gun battles in the area.

Several U.S. citizens have been killed in Mexico's drug war, most of them people with family ties to Mexico. It is very rare for American government employees to be targeted, although attackers hurled grenades at the U.S. consulate in the northern city of Monterrey in 2008.

The atmosphere of violence in Juarez had been creeping closer to U.S. offices for some time: on Friday, the consulate put a bar just around the block from its office off limits to U.S. government personnel "due to security concerns."

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