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Marisol Valles Garcia, 20-something Mexican police chief, comes to New York for play

  • Garcia will attend  'So Go the Ghosts of Mexico,' by...

    Raymundo Ruiz/ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Garcia will attend  'So Go the Ghosts of Mexico,' by Matthew Paul Olmos, that premieres Thursday at La MaMa at 74 E. Fourth St.

  • Criminology student Marisol Valles Garcia speaks high school students in...

    AFP/AFP/Getty Images

    Criminology student Marisol Valles Garcia speaks high school students in the northern Mexican border town of Praxedis in Chihuahua State. Marisol Valles became director of municipal public security "since she was the only person to accept the position," the mayor's office of the town of some 10,000 people near the U.S. border told local media late Monday.

  • An army vehicle patrols past the police station hours after...

    Raymundo Ruiz/ASSOCIATED PRESS

    An army vehicle patrols past the police station hours after Marisol Valles Garcia, a student, was sworn-in as the new police chief in the border town of Praxedis, near Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Oct. 20, 2010. Praxedis G. Guerrero was once a quiet farming town until two rival gangs, the Juarez and the Sinaloa drug cartels, began battling for the control of its single highway.

  • Marisol Valles Garcia will attend the opening a play based...

    JESUS ALCAZAR/AFP/Getty Images

    Marisol Valles Garcia will attend the opening a play based on her time as police chief of a violent Mexican border town. NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly has promised her protection.

  • Marisol Valles, at 20, the former police chief of a...

    Juan Carlos Llorca/ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Marisol Valles, at 20, the former police chief of a small Mexican town speaks at a press conference in her lawyer's office in El Paso, Texas to denounce drug-related violence in Mexico, on June 24, 2011.

  • Valles Garcia, was the only one who wanted the job...

    Juan Carlos Llorca/ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Valles Garcia, was the only one who wanted the job as police chief in Praxedis and abandoned her job after allegedly receiving death threats from drug cartels and seeks asylum in the U.S.

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The “bravest woman in Mexico” is coming to the mean streets of New York.

Marisol Valles Garcia — the baby-faced former police chief of a violent, drug-riddled Mexican border town — will celebrate the opening of a biographical play about her life when it opens this weekend in the East Village.

And the NYPD is ready to protect the 23-year-old, who made headlines worldwide in 2010 when she agreed to become the police chief of tiny Praxedis, Mexico, after no man in her town had the guts to step up.

Marisol Valles, at 20, the former police chief of a small Mexican town speaks at a press conference in her lawyer's office in El Paso, Texas to denounce drug-related violence in Mexico, on June 24, 2011.
Marisol Valles, at 20, the former police chief of a small Mexican town speaks at a press conference in her lawyer’s office in El Paso, Texas to denounce drug-related violence in Mexico, on June 24, 2011.

“If she needs some sort of protection, we’ll provide it,” said NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly about Valles, who remains a target of murderous Mexican drug cartels.

Valles’ daring one-woman battle against corruption and violence is the centerpiece of the play, “So Go the Ghosts of Mexico ,” by Matthew Paul Olmos, that premieres Thursday at La MaMa at 74 E. Fourth St.

Valles Garcia, was the only one who wanted the job as police chief in Praxedis and abandoned her job after allegedly receiving death threats from drug cartels and seeks asylum in the U.S.
Valles Garcia, was the only one who wanted the job as police chief in Praxedis and abandoned her job after allegedly receiving death threats from drug cartels and seeks asylum in the U.S.

Valles will attend a Sunday matinee of the play, which was inspired by her global impact, Olmos said.

“The significance of her ideas — that we could solve these conflicts by community improvements instead of armed conflict — are still being felt,” said the California playwright.

An army vehicle patrols past the police station hours after Marisol Valles Garcia, a student, was sworn-in as the new police chief in the border town of Praxedis, near Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Oct. 20, 2010. Praxedis G. Guerrero was once a quiet farming town until two rival gangs, the Juarez and the Sinaloa drug cartels, began battling for the control of its single highway.
An army vehicle patrols past the police station hours after Marisol Valles Garcia, a student, was sworn-in as the new police chief in the border town of Praxedis, near Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, Oct. 20, 2010. Praxedis G. Guerrero was once a quiet farming town until two rival gangs, the Juarez and the Sinaloa drug cartels, began battling for the control of its single highway.

The soft-spoken young mother, who was a criminal justice student, took the top cop job after out-of-control cartels had beheaded the last police chief of Praxedis — a common occurrence in the drug-torn country.

“I want my son to live in a different community to the one we have today. I want people to be able to go out without fear, as it was before,” Valles told reporters after pinning on her badge.

Garcia will attend  'So Go the Ghosts of Mexico,' by Matthew Paul Olmos, that premieres Thursday at La MaMa at 74 E. Fourth St.
Garcia will attend ‘So Go the Ghosts of Mexico,’ by Matthew Paul Olmos, that premieres Thursday at La MaMa at 74 E. Fourth St.

She stood up to the cartels with the barest of resources — one patrol car, four guns and 13 officers, nine of whom were women.

Valles opted not to carry a weapon and didn’t even have a security detail. She earned $640 a month for putting her life on the line.

Marisol Valles Garcia will attend the opening a play based on her time as police chief of a violent Mexican border town. NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly has promised her protection.
Marisol Valles Garcia will attend the opening a play based on her time as police chief of a violent Mexican border town. NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly has promised her protection.

She was forced to flee Praxedis mere months after becoming police chief — taking her toddler son and husband with her — because of harassment from the drug lords.

After one particularly threatening phone call from the Chapo Guzman cartel — demanding Valles drive to Ciudad Juarez to meet with the narcos or her husband and son would suffer — she and her family jumped into a friend’s pickup truck and made the 15-minute journey across the border into America with only the clothes on their backs.

She’s now living in El Paso, Texas, and seeking asylum, according to her lawyer, Carlos Spector.

gotis@nydailynews.com