‘A circus’ the visit to Rancho Izaguirre, criticize relatives of disappeared • Security • Forbes Mexico

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Teuchitlán (EFE) .- Search groups denounced this Thursday as a simulation their visit to the ranch allegedly used by drug traffickers to disappear people in the municipality of Teuchitlán, in Jalisco, by criticizing that in the “No indications” site and that only led them “to a circus’”.

The groups attended the call of the Jalisco authorities to visit the property, which is located just over an hour from the city of Guadalajara to attest the investigations of the case that has caused outrage in the country.

“I found nothing. (This) is a circus, a clown, I do not know what they want to do, but there is absolutely nothing we tried to find. This is cordoned for, but it is clean, to the floor is clean, there are not even leaves, it shows that they swept,” he expressed to Efe one of the seekers, who preferred the anonymity.

The doors of the so -called Izaguirre Rancho were open to the media and groups, but the route was only limited to certain areas and the experts who work in the place were not allowed, the relatives pointed out.

Lee: Families of missing continue to face institutional inefficiency: Coparmex

“You can see that they did their good job to bring us here (to simulate) I do not know why. We enter 10 or 15 minutes and go like a ‘tour’ (visit) because you are everything cordoned off and you have to continue in the spaces that they have assigned to you and there is absolutely nothing,” he added.

After a family waiting time of missing, the protocol broke to be able to enter a greater number to the property, but they left annoying and hopeless since they denounced that everything was accommodated, there are no indications and the place is totally changed.

Two weeks ago, Jalisco’s Warriors Search driver collective denounced having found a “recruitment concentration camp” of organized crime.

In their search they found clothes, as well as 400 pairs of shoes and hundreds of personal objects, where they assured that the National Guard found last September a forced training center of the Jalisco Nueva Generación Cartel (CJNG), which the United States has cataloged as a terrorist association.

For María Vázquez, the visit to the ranch was unproductive and painful.

“We came to see evidence, to see if there were garments and there is nothing. They tell me that (the signs) are already in some photos, but in a photo I cannot observe the same as seeing it in physical. My son will turn three years of disappeared,” he said.

Vázquez said that since his disappearance he practically seeks him “alone.”

“They already gave me the ‘Tour’ because they bring you to that, to turn around because there is nothing. What do you want to see? If everything is cordoned off, they are covered, they brought us to Turistear and really for us, or at least for me, this is a mockery,” he said.

Sheinbaum: Let the truth come out

President Claudia Sheinbaum announced that on Monday 24 she will present reforms to strengthen the search for missing persons, sanctions and a unique database in Mexico after the controversy of the ranch allegedly used to disappear people in Jalisco, the western state.

“Let the truth come from the subject of Jalisco and this particular property without hiding anything and the demarcation of responsibilities,” he emphasized.

This Thursday, the Jalisco Prosecutor’s Office reported that it had “made available to the FGR all the information of the Izaguirre ranch case for the purposes of exercising their power to attract and lead the investigation.”

Lee: Sheinbaum will present reforms to strengthen search for missing persons after controversial ranch in Jalisco

While on Wednesday, the Attorney General of the Republic, Alejandro Gertz Manero, confirmed that they did find human remains in the place and criticized the authorities of Jalisco, whom he accused of irregularity and omissions, especially for not performing the inspection of the place, nor the identification of the fingerprints that were there.

The finding of the ranch by groups of seeking families has shuddered the country, which accumulates more than 120,000 missing people, according to the National Registry of missing and not located, with data since the 1960s.

With EFE information

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