jesus murillo karam
Serious Faults Found in Mexico’s Handling of Missing Students Case, Independent Team Says
Dentures were found at the dump where the students were supposedly incinerated, among other anomalies detailed by the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team. The attorney general struck back at the group, calling its assertions "speculation."
Confessed Killer's Invisible 'Handcuffs' Bring More Mockery to Mexico’s Government
When federal police brought in a suspect in the case of the 43 disappeared students, they held him as if he was cuffed, but the confessed murderer was only hold water. "The dude is in custody," a government spokesman said.
Mexico Says Missing Students Case Is Solved, Despite No New Evidence
Four months after the Ayotzinapa Normal School students were "disappeared," authorities offered no conclusive proof all 43 young men were incinerated at a dump, but also asked the public to move on.
The Executioners: What the Government Hasn’t Revealed About the Mexico Student Massacre
Cartel members interrogated by authorities claim dozens of people — more than authorities admit — were attacked and killed because the cartel believed a rival gang was attempting to enter Iguala.
Townspeople Were Forced to Help Cartel on Night of Attacks on Mexican Students, Report Says
Locals in Chilacachapa told a Mexican newspaper that the Guerreros Unidos cartel rode through their town and carried away 25 people to help them against students "who were going to start a revolution." It is unclear what aid they gave the gang.
Mexico's Disappeared Students (Dispatch 1)
Mexico's Attorney General has confirmed that human remains found in a river in Cocula, Guerrero, were those of Alexander Mora, one of the missing 43 Ayotzinapa students.
Argentine Investigators Cast Doubt on Mexico's Claim Over Student Remains
The independent team said in a statement it could not verify the government's claim that a bone belonging to Ayotzinapa student Alexander Mora was indeed recovered from the Cocula river.
Fiery Protests Erupt in Mexico Over Missing Students
Angry demonstrators torched government buildings in Guerrero and Mexico City after officials announced that the 43 missing students were likely killed and burned in a mass grave.