Current:Home > InvestMexican police find 7 bodies, 5 of them decapitated, inside a car with messages "detailing the reason they were killed" -Balance Wealth Academy
Mexican police find 7 bodies, 5 of them decapitated, inside a car with messages "detailing the reason they were killed"
TradeEdge View
Date:2025-04-11 09:29:18
Authorities in one of Mexico's largest cities said Friday they have found seven bodies with five of them decapitated and another completely dismembered — with a message on each corpse — in a car left in the middle of traffic on a main expressway.
Prosecutors in the central state of Puebla said all of the bodies bore messages supposedly outlining the reasons each were killed. Each was accused of having committed a particular crime, from street-level drug dealing to robbing freight trucks to extortion, prosecutors said.
"On each of the bodies, we found hand-written messages written on paper, each one detailing the reason they were killed," said Puebla state chief prosecutor Gilberto Higuera.
Higuera did not mention whether the deaths might be related to drug cartels. He said the stolen car was left in the middle of traffic on the expressway.
While vigilantes have sometimes left such messages on corpses, similar signs are far more frequently left on victims' bodies by drug cartels seeking to threaten their rivals or punish behavior they claim violates their rules.
Higuera was extremely guarded in describing the evidence, but suggested it involved "not only a dispute (between gangs) but also something related to dominance over certain people, aimed at not only domination, but recruitment."
He did not further clarify that. But some cartels in Mexico, when seeking to establish a territory as their own, will kill off rivals or any petty thieves or drug dealers they find, and leave messages to convince local residents that such activities will not be tolerated under the new cartel.
The grisly killings were striking because they occurred in the relatively affluent and large city of Puebla, just east of Mexico City. Puebla is Mexico's fifth largest city and had largely been spared the drug cartel violence affecting surrounding areas. According to data published by the Puebla state prosecutor's office, the state as a whole recorded 200 murders in the first three months of 2024.
Leaving the bodies in the middle of an expressway also was unusual. Police were quickly alerted to the cadaver-laden car because it was blocking traffic on the city's main ring road.
Disturbing trend
Discoveries of mutilated bodies dumped in public or hung from bridges with menacing messages have increased in Mexico in recent years as cartels and gangs seek to intimidate their rivals.
In January, hacked-up bodies were found in two vehicles abandoned on a bridge in Mexico's Gulf coast state of Veracruz, prosecutors said. A banner left on one of the vehicles included an apparent warning message from a powerful cartel.
Last July, a violent drug cartel was suspected of leaving a severed human leg found hanging from a pedestrian bridge in Toluca, just west of Mexico City. The trunk of the body was left on the street below, near the city's center, along with handwritten messages signed by the Familia Michoacana cartel. Other parts of the bodies were found later in other neighborhoods, also with handwritten drug cartels signs nearby.
In 2022, the severed heads of six men were reportedly discovered on top of a Volkswagen in southern Mexico, along with a warning sign strung from two trees at the scene.
That same year, the bodies of seven men were found dumped on a roadway in the Huasteca region. Writing scrawled in markers on the corpses said "this is what happened to me for working with the Gulf," an apparent reference to the Gulf Cartel.
- In:
- Mexico
- Cartel
veryGood! (2312)
Related
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- A Legal Pot Problem That’s Now Plaguing the Streets of America: Plastic Litter
- Warmer Nights Caused by Climate Change Take a Toll on Sleep
- There's No Crying Over These Secrets About A League of Their Own
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Hailey Bieber Responds to Criticism She's Not Enough of a Nepo Baby
- And Just Like That, Sarah Jessica Parker Shares Her Candid Thoughts on Aging
- BuzzFeed shutters its newsroom as the company undergoes layoffs
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Pull Up a Seat for Jennifer Lawrence's Chicken Shop Date With Amelia Dimoldenberg
Ranking
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Billions in USDA Conservation Funding Went to Farmers for Programs that Were Not ‘Climate-Smart,’ a New Study Finds
- City and State Officials Continue Searching for the Cause of Last Week’s E. Coli Contamination of Baltimore’s Water
- Whatever His Motives, Putin’s War in Ukraine Is Fueled by Oil and Gas
- South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
- At Global Energy Conference, Oil and Gas Industry Leaders Argue For Fossil Fuels’ Future in the Energy Transition
- Little Big Town to Host First-Ever People's Choice Country Awards
- First Republic Bank shares plummet, reigniting fears about U.S. banking sector
Recommendation
2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
New Federal Anti-SLAPP Legislation Would Protect Activists and Whistleblowers From Abusive Lawsuits
New Mexico Wants it ‘Both Ways,’ Insisting on Environmental Regulations While Benefiting from Oil and Gas
Hurricane Michael Hit the Florida Panhandle in 2018 With 155 MPH Winds. Some Black and Low-Income Neighborhoods Still Haven’t Recovered
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Whatever His Motives, Putin’s War in Ukraine Is Fueled by Oil and Gas
First Republic Bank shares plummet, reigniting fears about U.S. banking sector
Senate Votes to Ratify the Kigali Amendment, Joining 137 Nations in an Effort to Curb Global Warming