Chivis Martinez Borderland
Beat TY Gus from San Diego Tribune
Margarito Martinez
spent 10 nights sleeping inside his white minivan parked outside a Tijuana
makeshift shelter last year when a caravan of Central American migrants reached
the U.S.-Mexico border.
Inside the shelter,
thousands of men, women and children were crammed into a park. When the winter
rains came many slept on mud and disease spread throughout the shelter.
Martinez was working.
He’d been hired by French journalists to be their eyes and ears in Tijuana.
“I had to be aware of
everything that was going on in the shelter,” he said, “If anything big
happened, I’d call the journalists and they’d come right away.”
Martinez, who works as
a freelance news photographer for multiple publications in Tijuana, wasn’t the
only local reporter hired by foreign journalists who descended upon Tijuana
when the migrant caravan arrived.
Whenever the foreign
press drops in to cover a big international story — be it a natural disaster in
Southeast Asia, a civil war in Africa, or a humanitarian crisis on the
U.S.-Mexico border — they rely on local guides to show them around town,
arrange interviews, scout locations, serve as translators, and sometimes even
negotiate interview terms with local cartel bosses.
These local guides are
referred to as “fixers.” Whenever the BBC, CNN, New York Times, or pretty much
any big news organization comes to Tijuana, they call local fixers.
“Basically, they are
looking for someone with good contacts who understands the unwritten rules of
the city — like which neighborhoods are safe to go to, how to speak with drug
dealers or human smugglers, those types of things,” said Jorge Nieto, a
Tijuana-based independent journalist who also works as a fixer.
The names of the men
and women who do this behind-the-scenes work don’t often appear on bylines or
credits, but without their work a lot of the award-winning news articles,
gripping television segments and iconic photographs from the migrant caravan
would not have seen the light of day.
In Tijuana, that work
can be particularly gruesome.
Martinez still
remembers the first time he photographed a dead body.
He was 30 at the time
and driving home from a pawn shop with his mother in the city’s Zona Norte when
they heard a barrage of gunfire.
His mother, who managed
a political magazine called La Lucha de las Feminas, got out of the car and ran
in the middle of the street, still wearing her high heels, toward the action.
“A normal mother says,
‘son, get down,’” Martinez said. “But I have a journalist mother. She told me
to grab my camera and took me to the gunfight.”
Martinez sold his
photos to local publications and has been covering Tijuana’s crime and mayhem
ever since. He drives around town in his minivan listening to a police scanner,
with a Raiders coffee mug on the dashboard and a bulletproof vest in the passenger
seat.
His reputation as a
crime photographer got around and he became the go-to fixer for any foreign
journalists who wanted to cover Tijuana’s escalating violence.
Tijuana fixers
Tijuana “fixer” Jorge
Nieto, a videographer himself, helps visiting photojournalists, reporters and
filmmakers to navigate the complexities of Tijuana. He was photographed in
Tijuana on Thursday, October 3, 019.(John Gibbins/The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Historically, foreign
journalists go to Tijuana almost exclusively to report on crime, drugs, the
border and immigration.
That’s because, for
decades, Tijuana has been ground zero for all of those stories.
From when the first
border wall was built in the 1990s, to when Mexico’s war on cartels brought
unprecedented levels of violence to the city after 2006, or during President
Barack Obama’s mass deportations, Tijuana has been where news happens.
More recently,
President Donald Trump’s border wall prototypes were erected in San Diego, and
the migrant caravan that the president referred to as an invasion landed in
Tijuana.
Each major event brings
hordes of foreign journalists to the city. And the hordes need local guides to
show them around.
When the caravan
arrived, it also brought reporters from China, Australia, Japan, France,
Germany, Italy, South Africa and all over the United States. Those reporters
came from news organizations that pay fixers between $300 and $450 per day.
That’s more than local journalists in Mexico make in a week.
It takes a special
skill-set to be a good fixer. You don’t simply drive people around town, said
Arturo Pichardo, who coincidentally also runs an ecotourism company in Baja.
“Driving tourists to a
winery isn’t the same as getting journalists into a migrant shelter,” said
Pichardo, who spent several weeks with photographers from Reuters who ended up
winning the Pulitzer Prize for their coverage of the migrant caravan.
Fixers are guides. But
apart from showing other journalists their city, fixers have to be cultural
guides as well to reporters who have never worked in Latin America.
“I have to translate,”
Nieto said. “Not just Spanish and English, but I have to translate culturally
how the work is going to be done.”
For example, Nieto
said, reporters who have never worked in Mexico may not understand that when a
source says, “I’ll see you in 15 minutes,” they really mean, “we’ll meet
eventually.”
Sometimes fixers have
to give up the secret spots to other journalists.
“I feel badly about
giving away my secret, especially when they are the ones who are going to get a
great photo published in the New York Times,” said fixer Jim Platel. “But I
bite the bullet and say, ‘well, it’s for the best.’”
Additionally, fixers
are asked to be editors, managing expectations from foreign journalists who
think they will be able to get a one-on-one interview with a cartel boss on a
few days’ notice.
“Their requests are
like a wish list to Santa Claus,” said Gaby Martinez, another Tijuana-based
fixer and journalist.
She specifically
remembers getting a request to set up an on-camera interview with a cartel’s
money launderer. In one week.
Part of her laughed,
but the other part felt a little hurt. Almost as if some foreign reporters don’t
see her as a colleague but rather someone to carry their suitcases. They ask
for interviews that put fixers at great risks, but when the story is over they
can leave Mexico while the fixer has to stay and assume potential backlash.
Nieto experienced a similar
situation with a European journalist who asked him to set up a film shoot
inside an active drug tunnel.
Nieto offered to show
them a tunnel that had already been discovered and to interview a cartel member
who had worked in it. But the journalists wanted to be in a tunnel when drugs
were moving through it.
“At one point, he asked
me, if the people we’re going to be doing this are trustworthy,” Nieto recalls.
“Well, I told him that they are criminals. How much can you trust a criminal?
We were going into a tunnel and they can shut it down at any moment.”
If they had gotten
kidnapped, the French journalist could’ve called his embassy and it would’ve
been an international scandal. But Nieto is Mexican, he lives along the border
and therefore would’ve assumed a greater risk.
Tijuana fixers
Tijuana “fixer” Arturo
Pichardo helps everyone from journalists to tourists to navigate the
complexities of Tijuana. He was photographed in Tijuana on Thursday, October 3,
019.(John Gibbins/The San Diego Union-Tribune)
When the foreign
journalists leave, the fixers stay and wait for the next big international
story to come to Tijuana.
In the meantime, fixers
go back to their day jobs. Nieto and Martinez work as freelance journalists and
fine-tune their skills by going to different journalist workshops.
Pichardo goes back to
his tourism business and shows people from San Diego Tijuana’s good side —
something he wishes more journalists were interested in.
“It’s important for
reporters to see how beautiful Tijuana is,” he said. “Yes, you can talk about
violence. But you can also talk about art, history, culture, sports,
gastronomy, so many things.”
Martinez simply goes
back to doing what he does best. Driving around Tijuana’s most dangerous
neighborhood in his minivan, listening to the police scanner, and waiting for
something to happen.
Martinez, who works as
a freelance news photographer for multiple publications in Tijuana, wasn’t the
only local reporter hired by foreign journalists who descended upon Tijuana
when the migrant caravan arrived.
Whenever the foreign
press drops in to cover a big international story — be it a natural disaster in
Southeast Asia, a civil war in Africa, or a humanitarian crisis on the
U.S.-Mexico border — they rely on local guides to show them around town,
arrange interviews, scout locations, serve as translators, and sometimes even
negotiate interview terms with local cartel bosses.
These local guides are
referred to as “fixers.” Whenever the BBC, CNN, New York Times, or pretty much
any big news organization comes to Tijuana, they call local fixers.
“Basically, they are
looking for someone with good contacts who understands the unwritten rules of
the city — like which neighborhoods are safe to go to, how to speak with drug
dealers or human smugglers, those types of things,” said Jorge Nieto, a
Tijuana-based independent journalist who also works as a fixer.
The names of the men
and women who do this behind-the-scenes work don’t often appear on bylines or
credits, but without their work a lot of the award-winning news articles,
gripping television segments and iconic photographs from the migrant caravan
would not have seen the light of day.
In Tijuana, that work
can be particularly gruesome.
Martinez still
remembers the first time he photographed a dead body.
He was 30 at the time
and driving home from a pawn shop with his mother in the city’s Zona Norte when
they heard a barrage of gunfire.
His mother, who managed
a political magazine called La Lucha de las Feminas, got out of the car and ran
in the middle of the street, still wearing her high heels, toward the action.
“A normal mother says,
‘son, get down,’” Martinez said. “But I have a journalist mother. She told me
to grab my camera and took me to the gunfight.”
Martinez sold his
photos to local publications and has been covering Tijuana’s crime and mayhem
ever since. He drives around town in his minivan listening to a police scanner,
with a Raiders coffee mug on the dashboard and a bulletproof vest in the
passenger seat.
His reputation as a
crime photographer got around and he became the go-to fixer for any foreign
journalists who wanted to cover Tijuana’s escalating violence.
Historically, foreign
journalists go to Tijuana almost exclusively to report on crime, drugs, the
border and immigration.
That’s because, for
decades, Tijuana has been ground zero for all of those stories.
From when the first
border wall was built in the 1990s, to when Mexico’s war on cartels brought
unprecedented levels of violence to the city after 2006, or during President
Barack Obama’s mass deportations, Tijuana has been where news happens.
More recently,
President Donald Trump’s border wall prototypes were erected in San Diego, and
the migrant caravan that the president referred to as an invasion landed in
Tijuana.
Each major event brings
hordes of foreign journalists to the city. And the hordes need local guides to
show them around.
When the caravan
arrived, it also brought reporters from China, Australia, Japan, France,
Germany, Italy, South Africa and all over the United States. Those reporters
came from news organizations that pay fixers between $300 and $450 per day.
That’s more than local journalists in Mexico make in a week.
It takes a special
skill-set to be a good fixer. You don’t simply drive people around town, said
Arturo Pichardo, who coincidentally also runs an ecotourism company in Baja.
“Driving tourists to a
winery isn’t the same as getting journalists into a migrant shelter,” said
Pichardo, who spent several weeks with photographers from Reuters who ended up
winning the Pulitzer Prize for their coverage of the migrant caravan.
Fixers are guides. But
apart from showing other journalists their city, fixers have to be cultural
guides as well to reporters who have never worked in Latin America.
“I have to translate,”
Nieto said. “Not just Spanish and English, but I have to translate culturally
how the work is going to be done.”
For example, Nieto
said, reporters who have never worked in Mexico may not understand that when a
source says, “I’ll see you in 15 minutes,” they really mean, “we’ll meet
eventually.”
Sometimes fixers have
to give up the secret spots to other journalists.
“I feel badly about
giving away my secret, especially when they are the ones who are going to get a
great photo published in the New York Times,” said fixer Jim Platel. “But I
bite the bullet and say, ‘well, it’s for the best.’”
Additionally, fixers
are asked to be editors, managing expectations from foreign journalists who
think they will be able to get a one-on-one interview with a cartel boss on a
few days’ notice.
“Their requests are
like a wish list to Santa Claus,” said Gaby Martinez, another Tijuana-based
fixer and journalist.
She specifically
remembers getting a request to set up an on-camera interview with a cartel’s
money launderer. In one week.
Part of her laughed,
but the other part felt a little hurt. Almost as if some foreign reporters
don’t see her as a colleague but rather someone to carry their suitcases. They
ask for interviews that put fixers at great risks, but when the story is over
they can leave Mexico while the fixer has to stay and assume potential
backlash.
Nieto experienced a
similar situation with a European journalist who asked him to set up a film
shoot inside an active drug tunnel.
Nieto offered to show
them a tunnel that had already been discovered and to interview a cartel member
who had worked in it. But the journalists wanted to be in a tunnel when drugs
were moving through it.
“At one point, he asked
me, if the people we’re going to be doing this are trustworthy,” Nieto recalls.
“Well, I told him that they are criminals. How much can you trust a criminal?
We were going into a tunnel and they can shut it down at any moment.”
If they had gotten
kidnapped, the French journalist could’ve called his embassy and it would’ve
been an international scandal. But Nieto is Mexican, he lives along the border
and therefore would’ve assumed a greater risk.
When the foreign
journalists leave, the fixers stay and wait for the next big international
story to come to Tijuana.
In the meantime, fixers
go back to their day jobs. Nieto and Martinez work as freelance journalists and
fine-tune their skills by going to different journalist workshops.
Pichardo goes back to
his tourism business and shows people from San Diego Tijuana’s good side —
something he wishes more journalists were interested in.
“It’s important for
reporters to see how beautiful Tijuana is,” he said. “Yes, you can talk about
violence. But you can also talk about art, history, culture, sports,
gastronomy, so many things.”
Martinez simply goes
back to doing what he does best. Driving around Tijuana’s most dangerous
neighborhood in his minivan, listening to the police scanner, and waiting for
something to happen.
I believe an interview by government officials pertaining these criminals are what's necessary. Reporters get all the luck to influence stories of interest. While government enforcement are running wildly for a dent in criminal activities.
ReplyDeleteLuck. Luck? Sounds like grit patience skill passion and a willingness to put in the work, sad dirty hard work. He has a line to a police scanner. I'm assuming the same channel on the scanner could be accessed by any official of the badge and gun or suit and tie variety. Maybe they should get out of bed. Maybe they need to up their game. It is their game after all.
DeleteSounds like an easy leavton
ReplyDeleteWould CJNG or Los Zetas welcome a TV camera crew into their headquarters I wonder?
ReplyDeleteMaybe we need to get a fixer to interview Sicario006 in his mama basement while he doing school homework. Ha ha
ReplyDeleteLeave agent sic006 alone. He is on a top level mission up on the mountain against el mencho.
DeleteI, heard sicario 006 is on a top level mission pleasing pardon helping the CDS troops.
DeleteHe's been mia lately. Hope not hurt in battle.
DeleteThanks Chivis. Vest no good on seat, wear it!. And "Fixers" would that be how for example Anabel Hernandez got RCQ interview?.
ReplyDeleteGreat job 👍 but dangerous.
ReplyDeleteAhi andan de calientes
ReplyDeletehasta que se los chinguen.
I, can make it hapoen to interview a sicarios as well. - Ghost
ReplyDeleteWow! People actually want to risk having a meeting set up with a known sicario, or human trafficker. I mean, what could possibly go wrong?
ReplyDeleteI want to be in the jungy and meet up with commandate Marcos.
ReplyDeleteNo one has thought of placing a GPS device on these people or the reporters in order to locate these sicarios????
ReplyDeleteYes! here is your chance to interview the lowest form of life! The scum of the earth! No thanks!
ReplyDeleteWould rather not hear anything out of these scumbags mouths