it's a dangerous place, especially for journalists. 34-year-old javier valdez carlinas covers drug traffickingwhere bodies turn up almost every day. it's a small, tenacious newspaper he launched in 2003. javier has somehow mentioned to report on the drug trade and stay alive. >> translator: you experience a lot of fear. you have to be looking in your mirror to see if somebody is following you. there isn't any safe place. not even your home. >> when you write an article about narco trafficking, are you afraid that somebody will retaliate against you? >> i'm always scared. you know how dangerous it is to the commander who works for traffickers. it's better to censor myself, because i want to continue to the write. silence is a form of death, of complicity. i'm not dead, i'm alive. >> but in life, he walks a very fine line. javier and his colleagues have received threats, and in one morning in september of 2009, two grenades were hurled into the office, causing damage, but no injuries. just days before the attack, the paper had published a series on narco trafficking. i asked him who was responsi