Current:Home > Markets11 ex-police officers get 50 years in prison for massacre near U.S. border in Mexico -WealthTrack
11 ex-police officers get 50 years in prison for massacre near U.S. border in Mexico
View
Date:2025-04-18 08:08:43
A court in Mexico sentenced 11 former police officers to 50 years in prison each for the 2021 slayings of 17 migrants and two Mexican citizens, authorities said Tuesday.
The ex-officers were convicted earlier this year of homicide and abuse of authority. A 12th officer was convicted only of abuse of authority and sentenced to 19 years in prison, said Assistant Public Safety Secretary Luis Rodríguez Bucio.
The officers were members of an elite police group in the northern state of Tamaulipas, across the border from Texas.
They had initially argued they were responding to shots fired and believed they were chasing the vehicles of one of the country's drug cartels, which frequently participate in migrant smuggling.
The officers were accused of burning the victims' bodies in an attempt to cover up the crime. The bodies were found piled in a charred pickup truck in Camargo, across the Rio Grande from Texas, in an area that has been bloodied for years by turf battles between the remnants of the Gulf cartel and the old Zetas cartel.
Most of the dead migrants were from rural, Indigenous farming communities in Guatemala. Relatives said they lost contact with 13 of the migrants as they traveled toward the U.S.
The truck holding the bodies had 113 bullet holes, but authorities were confused by the fact that almost no spent shell casings were found at the scene. It later came out that the state police officers involved in the killings knew their shell casings might give them away, so they apparently picked them up.
The officers were members of the 150-member Special Operations Group, known in Spanish as GOPES, an elite state police unit that, under another name, had previously been implicated in other human rights abuses. The unit has since been disbanded.
So fearsome was the unit's reputation that the U.S. government, which trained a few of its individual members, sought at the time to distance itself from the force.
The U.S. embassy in Mexico said in 2021 that three of the 12 officers charged in the migrant massacre "received basic skills and/or first line supervisor training" through a State Department program before they were assigned to the special unit. "The training of these individuals took place in 2016 and 2017 and were fully compliant" with rules on vetting over human rights concerns, the embassy said.
The killings revived memories of the gruesome 2010 massacre of 72 migrants near the town of San Fernando in the same gang-ridden state. But those killings were done by a drug cartel.
- In:
- Mexico
- Homicide
- U.S.-Mexico Border
- Crime
veryGood! (127)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- How much is that remote job worth to you? Americans will part with pay to work from home
- 'Rick and Morty' reveals replacements for Justin Roiland in Season 7 premiere
- How Christina Aguilera Really Feels About Britney Spears' Upcoming Memoir
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Montana judge keeps in place a ban on enforcement of law restricting drag shows, drag reading events
- Colombia signs three-month cease-fire with FARC holdout group
- A $1.4 million ticket for speeding? Georgia man shocked by hefty fine, told it's no typo
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Waiting for news, families of Israeli hostages in Gaza tell stories of their loved ones
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Here's why gas prices are down, even in pricey California, as Israel-Hamas war escalates
- Donald Trump is returning to his civil fraud trial, but star witness Michael Cohen won’t be there
- Raiders 'dodged a big bullet' with QB Jimmy Garoppolo's back injury, Josh McDaniels says
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Brussels shooter who killed 2 soccer fans in 'act of terrorism' shot dead by police
- FDA faces pressure to act nationwide on red dye in food
- Putin meets Hungarian Prime Minister Orbán in first meeting with EU leader since invasion of Ukraine
Recommendation
Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
How China’s Belt and Road Initiative is changing after a decade of big projects and big debts
Kids are tuning into the violence of the Israel Hamas war. What parents should do.
The mother of an Israeli woman in a Hamas hostage video appeals for her release
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
A Florida man turned $10 into $4 million after winning $250k for life scratch-off game
Colombia signs three-month cease-fire with FARC holdout group
Justice Barrett expresses support for a formal US Supreme Court ethics code in Minnesota speech