The state attorney general declined to confirm Mexican media reports that ride-share individuals may be missing.
The condition attorney general’s office declined to comment on accounts that five ride-share individuals from Ojinaga, a frontier town, were among the victims, according to Mexican media reports. The owners reported to their families that they were paying for the trip to Presidio, Texas, which is located about three days northeast of the state capital.
The attorney general’s office said in a statement that the identities of the victims wo n’t be established until forensic examinations are finished and the Crimes Against Persons Unit presents its initial findings.
At 7:50 a.m. on Friday, Chihuahua police received reports of potentially deceased individuals crossing the Chihuahua-Aldama Highway. Two sluggish, nude male body lying on the ground and with blankets covering the other three bodies were discovered by a Border Report camera team in Chihuahua.
On Friday, the prosecution still had no established information regarding the whereabouts of Francisco Ivan Flores Hernandez, his brother Abigael Ramos Gonzalez, his nephew Fabian Ramos Torres, Sandra Salais Calzadillas, and his brother Abigael Ramos Gonzalez.
One family member received a notification that one of the five was going back to Ojinaga and that another had informed the five that they were taking tickets. Their vehicles were picked up by friends who used a GPS application a few days later.