Essay from the year 2017 in the subject American Studies - Miscellaneous, grade: 2,5, University of Frankfurt (Main), language: English, abstract: In fictive works about the border femicides the police work in two countries (the United States and Mexico) is described differently. In Stella Pope Duarte's book If I Die in Juárez and in Meredith Stiehm's and Elwood Reid's Pilot of the series “The Bridge-America” (2013/14 FX/Netflix) the national police departments of the USA and Mexico are confronted with a femicide¹ . In her book Duarte integrates a great knowledge of the real situation regarding the femicides in Juárez, after she had interviewed some of the victim's families. The protagonists of the book are 14-year-old Evita, a poor girl who was forced to prostitution and to live on the streets, her 19-year-old beautiful cousin Petra who becomes a maquiladora worker and Mayela, a young Tarahumara Indian girl who is gifted with an outstanding talent in art. The three girls meet under fateful circumstances to investigate the femicides occurring in Juárez: they reveal the intrigue of a group of criminals until one of them is tortured and killed in an inevitably sadistic way too. The Pilot episode of “The Bridge-America” is about the investigation of a corpse: On the bridge connecting El Paso with Ciudad Juárez, a bisected, mutilated body is found. The two detectives, Mexican Marco Ruiz and American Sonya Cross decide to cooperate to solve the case. After further investigation Cross discovers that the two body parts belong to different persons: Judge Gates and Christina Fuentes, a young Mexican girl and maquiladora worker. Christina Fuentes is one of the world-famous femicides of Juárez and therefore one of uncountable inexplicable corpses. Cross suspects a serial killer behind all the cases, but learns that the Mexican police refuses to investigate further and benefits from bribery instead. The US-American and the Mexican cooperation on the Juárez femicides collapses because of the different development of the police departments, the corruption of the Mexican police and the increasing number of victims.