Stay or go? US residents of Mexico town torn after 9 killed

A child tosses a handful of dirt on the coffin that contains the remains of 12-year-old Howard Jacob Miller Jr., at the cemetery in Colonia Le Baron, Mexico, Friday, Nov. 8, 2019, during a burial service for Rhonita Miller and four of her young children. The bodies of Miller and four of her children were taken in a convoy of pickup trucks and SUVS, on the same dirt-and-rock mountainous road where they were killed Monday by drug cartel men, for burial in the community of Colonia Le Baron in Chihuahua state. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

Family and friends unload the coffins that contain the remains of Rhonita Miller, and four of her young children Krystal and Howard, and twins Titus and Tiana, who were murdered by drug cartel gunmen earlier in the week, for a burial service at the cemetery in Colonia Le Baron, Mexico, Friday, Nov. 8, 2019. The bodies of Miller and four of her children were taken in a convoy of pickup trucks and SUVS, on the same dirt-and-rock mountainous road where they were killed Monday, for burial in the community of Colonia Le Baron in Chihuahua state. (AP Photo/Christian Chavez)

COLONIA LEBARON, Mexico — U.S. citizens living in a small Mexican farming community established by their Mormon ancestors are trying to decide whether they should stay or leave after burying some of the nine American women and children slaughtered this week in a drug cartel ambush.

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