Ariel Julian Savein would drive to classes at Vancouver’s Point Grey secondary a decade ago in his father’s green BMW.
In his 2003 graduation yearbook, Savein thanked his parents and teachers for getting him through school: “Looking back, it’s hard to put things in perspective but I think I’ve learned a lot.”
His privileged existence was dramatically different from those 3,000 kilometres away in rugged Culiacán, Mexico, headquarters of the world’s most powerful drug trafficking ...
