Jalisco Prosecutor’s Office rules out that there were clandestine crematoriums in Rancho de Teuchitlán

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The Jalisco State Prosecutor’s Office ruled out Thursday that there were clandestine crematoriums on a farm in a rural area where burned human remains have been found.

The so -called Rancho Izaguirre, in the municipality of Teuchitlán, is thoroughly inspected by state and federal authorities, who have found hundreds of shoes, garments and objects that are feared are of people reported as missing.

“It was found that there are no structures that serve as furnaces,” Jalisco’s Prosecutor’s Office reported in a statement.

The text recognizes, however, that the place has rooms, bathrooms, kitchen, wineries, a tactical training area and another physical conditioning.

The Guerreros Searching organization, which located the human remains on January 5, was the one that denounced those assumptions “clandestine crematoriums.”

The FGR attracted the case at the request of President Claudia Sheinbaum and must render a report of its inquiries.

You may be interested: Sheinbaum asks Jalisco’s graves for a case before drawing conclusions

Jalisco Prosecutor’s Office rules out that there were clandestine crematoriums in Rancho de Teuchitlán

The local prosecutor’s statement explained that this Thursday “technological tools” were used to expedite work at the ranch.

The place had already been raided and inspected by the Jalisco Prosecutor’s Office last September, but without finding the calcined human remains

On that occasion, they discovered that the place was a training center for organized crime, they arrested ten armed people and released two kidnapped.

The authorities also investigate how the federal experts and forces participating in that operation did not notice the calcined remains.

Jalisco civil organizations and other states have different demonstrations on a day they have called “national mourning.”

Jalisco is the State in Mexico with the most missing, around 15,000, most attributed to organized crime.

Amid the wave of violence linked to drug trafficking that hits Mexico, almost 480,000 violent deaths and about 110,000 missing, according to official figures, have been recorded since December 2006.

With agency information.

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