Chihuahua officers, Hispanic men completely 13 Central American victims, imprisonment six suspects and are looking for two systems
The two workers who turned themselves in to Border Patrol on June 8 claimed that their captors had burned them in different parts of their bodies. After their households paid a payment in addition to the previously collected smuggling fees, they also informed border agents that they had been freed.
Homeland Security Investigations officials in Las Cruces, New Mexico, and in Juarez, Mexico, worked with Mexican regulators to find the home operated by an unknown transnational criminal business. 13 Hondurans, Guatemalans, and Salvadorans were rescued from the hoard residence in Juarez’s Anapra area, which is located just south of the border walls at Sunland Park, New Mexico, after conducting a joint analysis.
The Central Americans rescued from the home had burns, broken bones, tie marks and bruising from stabbings. Adult migrants were victims of sexual assault, according to a new investigation. According to HSI, the workers were forced to drink waters from a bathroom and were not properly fed.
The Chihuahua Attorney General’s Office reported that there were two juveniles among the workers, and four of them had injuries that required treatment.
In the Anapra/Barrio Alto area, Chihuahua state authorities and Mexican soldiers detained four male and two adult suspects on suspicion of kidnapping, sexual abuse, and possession of drugs and weapons in response to information from HSI. Mexican officials identified them as Jesus Tomas C. S., 24, Oswaldo P. M., 19, Lilia Estefani C. P., 22, and Diana Michell S. V., 20. Eventually, it was discovered that the other two prisoners were adolescents.
The suspects reportedly were found in possession of a.45- ability revolver, a 9mm gun and an unknown amount of marijuana.
The kidnappers reportedly murdered two workers at their home, according to additional research. According to HSI, Mexican officials are attempting to locate the two systems.
” This research is a prime example of Homeland Security Investigations ‘ unwavering commitment to identifying and holding transnational criminal organizations responsible for committing nasty and brutal crimes,” said Jason T. Stevens, the acting special adviser in charge of HSI in El Paso. We will continue to collaborate with our frontier partners in order to use all of our governments ‘ resources to defend victims of crime and prosecute the offenders.
Border officials use Anapra as a staging area for international criminal organizations to muggle foreign nationals into the country with the intention of elude being captured. A group known to Mexican authorities as operating in Anapra has been linked to at least two immigrant hoard homes in New Mexico.
Competent sources told Border Report that the organization is suspected of abducting and brutalizing Central Americans.