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HOMEPAGE
World


WE FINALLY KNOW HOW 43 STUDENTS ON A BUS VANISHED INTO THIN AIR

MYSTERY SOLVED

PEDRO PARDO/AFP VIA GETTY

Chilling new text messages point to deadly collusion between police and
organized crime in the infamous case of the missing Mexican students.

JEREMY KRYT

Published Oct. 10, 2021 4:57AM ET 

Transcripts of newly released text messages between a crime boss and a deputy
police chief have finally lifted the lid on the mystery of 43 students who went
missing one night in southwestern Mexico.

The messages indicate that the cops and the cartel worked together to capture,
torture, and murder at least 38 of the 43 student teachers who went missing in
September of 2014.

The students had made the deadly mistake of commandeering several buses in order
to drive to Mexico City for a protest. It now seems clear that those buses were
part of a drug-running operation that would carry a huge cargo of heroin across
the U.S. border—and the students had accidentally stolen the load.

Gildardo López Astudillo was the local leader of the Guerreros Unidos cartel at
that time. He was in charge of the area around the town of Iguala, in
southwestern Mexico, where the students were last seen. Francisco Salgado
Valladares was the deputy chief of the municipal police force in the town.



On Sept. 26, 2014, Salgado texted López to report that his officers had arrested
two groups of students for having taken the busses. Salgado then wrote that 21
of the students were being held on a bus. López responded by arranging a
transfer point on a rural road near the town, saying he “had beds to terrorize”
the students in, likely referencing his plans to torture and bury them in
clandestine grave sites.

Police chief Salgado next wrote that he had 17 more students being held “in the
cave,” to which López replied that he “wants them all.” The two then made plans
for their underlings to meet at a place called Wolf’s Gap, and Salgado reminded
López to be sure to send enough men to handle the job.

Aside from a few bone fragments, the bodies of the students have never been
found.

Some of the remains of Christian Alfonso Rodriguez Telumbre, one of the 43
missing students, was found at the mountain town of Cocula, near Iguala

REUTERS/HENRY ROMERO

A bit later that night, Salgado also informed the crime boss that “all the
packages have been delivered.” This appears to be a reference to the fact that
one or more of the busses commandeered by the students had, unbeknownst to them,
been loaded with heroin that the Guerreros Unidos had intended to smuggle north
toward the U.S. border.

Mike Vigil, the DEA’s former chief of international operations, told The Daily
Beast that this strongly implies that López was calling the shots all along,
ordering Salgado to arrest the students lest they accidentally hijack his
shipment of dope.

“The new evidence that has come to light regarding the Ayotzinapa case cracks it
wide open and provides irrefutable proof of who was involved in the student
massacre,” Vigil said.


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“The story of the massacre of the students in Ayotzinapa is like a Hollywood
movie, but the events are real. They involve collusion between the police, army,
organized crime, and a massive coverup by the Mexican government.”

The students were all enrolled at the Rural Teachers College in the nearby town
of Ayotzinapa, and so they became known as the Ayotzinapa 43. The College is
considered a bastion of leftist activism and on the night of the disappearance
more than 100 students had been making their way to the nation’s capital. There
they planned to take part in demonstrations to mark the anniversary of the 1968
student massacre at Tlatelolco. Most of the student teachers were in their early
twenties, but the youngest—Jose Angel Navarrete, known as Pepe to his
friends—was just 18 years old.

The mass kidnapping in Iguala would spark protests across Mexico. The previous
government originally put forward a theory—now largely discredited—that the
students’ bodies had been burned in a trash dump on the outskirts of Iguala. In
the wake of the new evidence, the young men's families are demanding fresh
searches for the bodies and additional evidence to identify all of those
involved.

Relatives gathered in Mexico City with pictures of their missing family.

REUTERS/HENRY ROMERO

Stephanie Brewer, the Mexico director at the Washington Office on Latin America,
said the new evidence shows how often in Mexico “organized crime is comprised of
both state and non-state actors.”

Brewer pointed to both “state tolerance and collusion—seen in this case in its
most brutal and extreme form, where corrupt police are carrying out the gravest
human rights violations that exist.”


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Although Salgado is already incarcerated for his alleged role in the massacre,
López was arrested and then released over an apparent failure of due process,
and remains at large.

Although not specifically mentioned in the text messages, allegations have
previously surfaced that Mexico’s military was also involved in the
disappearances.

A leading newspaper, La Reforma, published leaked testimony earlier this year
that suggested army officers based in Iguala had also worked with the Guerreros
Unidos to round up some of the students as well as other enemies of the cartel
who were in the town on the night of Sept. 26.

The exchanges between the cop and the capo in Iguala were originally intercepted
by the army, which has taken some seven years to release them. That has led to
criticism, including from the families of the missing students, that the army is
not being transparent despite a presidential commission having been established
with universal jurisdiction over the case.

“The army hides information because it’s in their best interest to do so,” said
a high-ranking Mexican police commander who agreed to speak to The Daily Beast
only under the condition of anonymity. “The whole world knows that the army
controls the drug trade [in that part of Mexico.]”

Protests have been held across the country as people demanded the authorities
did more to end the traumatic wait for answers.

NURPHOTO


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The Reforma report indicated that, in addition to the 43 students, the army had
participated in the abduction of some 30 cartel rivals to Guerreros Unidos that
same night.

“The army destroys anyone or anything that gets in their way,” the commander
said. “They work with organized crime to protect their own objectives.”

WOLA’s Brewer also pointed to the Mexican military’s lack of cooperation in the
case.

“The Mexican army had these wiretaps [and so] had knowledge about the facts that
it was not sharing,” Brewer said.

“This raises questions about why and how the army obtained this information, and
what obstacles still need to be overcome to be sure that the army is in fact
sharing its information with those in charge of investigating the case.”

The DEA’s Vigil said it is “unconscionable” that so many of the cartel members,
police and military officers involved in the crime have yet to be punished.


Advertisement

“Mexico continues to wonder why violence persists unabated. They don’t
understand that no consequence for criminal actions translates to more
impunity.”

Unfortunately, the tragedy of Iguala is far from an isolated incident. More than
93,000 people have gone missing during Mexico’s long drug war—and more than 90
percent of those cases have never been solved, according to Brewer, who is
helping WOLA push the Mexican government for reforms in its treatment of missing
persons.

“During the past three years, over 25,000 people have been declared disappeared
or missing and remain so today, according to official statistics,” Brewer said.
“That is almost one person every hour.”



Extremism


WILL FOX NEWS-LOVING SHERIFF’S OATH KEEPER TIES COST HIM HIS JOB?

EXPOSED

Chad Bianco, the outspoken sheriff of Riverside County who has railed against
COVID-19 safety measures, was revealed to have ties to a far-right militia
group.

ANDREW BORYGA

Justice Reporter

Updated Oct. 15, 2021 5:25AM ET / Published Oct. 15, 2021 4:22AM ET 


PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY THE DAILY BEAST/PHOTOS ALAMY

When Chad Bianco—the outspoken Sheriff of Riverside County who has drawn
criticism for his ties to a far-right militia group and his opposition to
public-health rules—was first elected in 2018, he was unknown but seemed like an
improvement from the previous sheriff.

“He was seen as an opportunity to do better,” Megan Beaman-Jacinto, a city
councilwoman in Coachella and a civil rights attorney, told The Daily Beast. “Or
like it couldn’t get any worse.”

But over the last three years, the Fox News-loving Bianco has been accused of
prioritizing a right-wing political identity above the needs of the more than 2
million residents he serves, and Beaman-Jacinto and other elected officials are
calling for his ouster.

Like others, Beaman-Jacinto pointed to instances where Bianco has voiced
opposition to public-health orders, vaccine mandates and efforts to reduce
prison populations during the pandemic. Organizations like the ACLU have also
called for investigations into how his Sheriff’s Department used COVID-19 relief
funds, its use of force against residents of color, and its treatment of inmates
at the county jail.




 * OATH KEEPERS PANICKED THAT THE LEFT WOULD ‘DECAPITATE’ THEM
   
   ‘Night Of The Long Knives’
   
   KELLY WEILL
   
   

Then, last week, it was revealed that Bianco was a dues-paying member of the
far-right Oath Keepers in 2014. “Given his track record as a sheriff in the last
three years, it wasn’t surprising at all,” Beaman-Jacinto said.

But Beaman-Jacinto said the revelation, thanks to a recent hack of Oath Keepers
membership data, did help put Bianco’s contentious tenure in a national
spotlight, which she has faith will help a growing movement to vote him out of
office next year.

“It might end up being a catalyst to really seeing some change in the leadership
of the sheriff’s department,” Beaman-Jacinto said. “At least that’s my hope.”

Bianco did not respond to a request for comment.

“To not hear him denounce them only 10 months after the insurrection of the
capital is shocking to me.”

Last week, Bianco told The Desert Sun he paid $40 for a year-long membership
with the Oath Keepers in 2014, but never extended his membership. “Like many
other law enforcement officers and veterans who were members, I learned the
group did not offer me anything and so I did not continue membership,” Bianco
said.

He told The LAist that despite numerous members of the group being arrested for
their roles in the Jan. 6 Capitol Insurrection, the group was not a threat to
democracy. “Except for a few fringe people, that’s not really what they stand
for,” he told the outlet. “They certainly don’t promote violence and government
overthrow. They stand for protecting the Constitution.”

According to groups like The Southern Poverty Law Center, The Oath Keepers are a
large far-right anti-government group with many present and former law
enforcement members and military veterans in its ranks.

Beaman-Jacinto and other elected leaders, who called for Bianco’s resignation
after his Oath Keeper ties were revealed, said his decision not to disavow the
group in light of Jan. 6 speaks volumes. “He’s not taking any responsibility for
it and I don’t think he regrets it all,” Beaman-Jacinto said.

“To not hear him denounce them only 10 months after the insurrection of the
capital is shocking to me,” Palm Springs Mayor Christy Holstege told The Daily
Beast. (Shortly after Bianco’s ties were revealed, Holstege called for his
resignation.)

“Unfortunately the police unions have a lot of power and influence in
determining who the next sheriff will be.”

She told The Daily Beast that many who have defended Bianco point to the fact
that he was a member of the group in 2014, as if to say it is behind him. But
she said Bianco’s responses about his past membership didn’t address his views
today. “What are his views? Are his views aligned with the Oath Keepers?” she
told The Daily Beast.

Despite the calls for Bianco’s resignation, officials like Beaman-Jacinto and
Holstege said they are aware they are unlikely to have any effect. The best
chance to remove him, they said, is to support a growing effort to vote him out
of office in 2022.

“It’s up to us to sound the alarm bell, organize and put some money together,”
Joy Silver, co-chair of a political action committee formed in recent months to
campaign against Bianco, told The Daily Beast.

Silver said the committee plans to support candidates who could oppose Bianco.
So far no one has publicly declared an intention to run against the sheriff, but
Silver said she expects candidates to announce closer to filing deadlines early
next year.

Bianco’s past ties to the Oath Keepers have helped their cause to persuade
voters that the sheriff has “extremist values,” Silver said. But she said the
attention on Bianco has also helped his fundraising efforts, particularly among
conservatives who support him.

As it stands, Bianco has raised over $500,000 for his reelection push, according
to campaign finance records. Silver’s committee has less than $5,000.


 * POLICE CHIEF FLAMES OUT AFTER CALLING EMPLOYEES ‘B*TCHES’
   
   LOVELY, REALLY LOVELY
   
   ANDREW BORYGA
   
   

In addition to funds, the effort to unseat Bianco is challenged by the fact that
Riverside County is more politically moderate than other parts of the state.

In 2020, the county of more than 2 million elected Joe Biden as president by a
margin of less than 10 percent. In September, the county was the largest in the
state that had a majority of residents vote to recall California Governor Gavin
Newsom.

Silver said Bianco revealed his political allegiances during the early months of
the COVID-19 pandemic—which elicited disgust from those who were for
stay-at-home orders and efforts to keep inmates safe, and praise from those who
believed California’s rules to be excessive.

But Silver believes the revelations about Bianco’s ties to a dangerous far-right
group, and his seemingly unwillingness to distance himself from them, will
motivate voters. “If they want to save democracy, this is the way to do it right
at home,” Silver said.

Bianco joined the Riverside County Sheriff’s Office in 1993. In 2018, he
defeated 11-year incumbent Sheriff Stan Sniff after winning support and over
$600,000 from the Riverside Sheriffs’ Association, a union representing the
department.

“I am certainly not anti-vaccine. I am anti-vaccine for me. ”

According to campaign finance records, The Sheriffs’ Association recently
chipped in another $17,000 to Bianco’s reelection campaign.

Beaman-Jacinto said Bianco’s deep union support is a hurdle that efforts to vote
him out will have to contend with. “Unfortunately the police unions have a lot
of power and influence in determining who the next sheriff will be,” she said.
“And when we don’t tend to agree with the police unions and the candidates they
put forth, it’s really difficult to find another law enforcement agent willing
to run for sheriff and oppose them.”

The Sheriffs’ Association did not respond to a request for comment.

Although Bianco, who ran as a Republican, was supported by Democrats in the
state for his seemingly willingness to create change in the Sheriff’s Office,
Holstege, the Democratic mayor of Palm Springs, said the pandemic and his
outspokenness on Fox News, local meetings and on social media made many regret
their choice.

“He revealed himself,” she told The Daily Beast.

In a May 2020 appearance on Fox News, shortly after telling the Board of County
supervisors that he would not enforce stay at home orders, Bianco criticized
local leaders for trying to “make criminals out of law abiding citizens” and
said the government shouldn’t be “picking and choosing who gets to open.”

In a July 2020 Facebook post, he criticized decriminalization efforts in the
state and said the pandemic was being used to “further” that agenda. “The
governor and the majority of our legislature care more about murderers, rapists,
child molesters, and gang members than they care about the law-abiding residents
of this state, many of whom are victims of these criminals being released,” he
wrote.


 * TENANTS SAY RACIST ‘LANDLORD FROM HELL’ TORMENTED THEM
   
   NIGHTMARE
   
   ANDREW BORYGA
   
   

By December, Bianco released a video statement opposing pending stay-at-home
orders from Gov. Newsom. Bianco said Newsom was revealing a “dictatorial
attitude” to residents. “These closures and stay-at-home-orders are flat out
ridiculous,” Bianco said. Enforcing the orders, he said, would rob residents of
their civil liberties. “The Riverside County Sheriff’s Department will not be
blackmailed, bullied or used as muscle against Riverside County residents,”
Bianco said.

In September, Bianco said in a statement that he would not enforce any vaccine
mandates on his employees. “I am certainly not anti-vaccine,” he said. “I am
anti-vaccine for me.” Bianco said that part of his job as sheriff is to be the
“last line of defense from tyrannical government overreach.”

“The government has no ability and no authority to mandate your health choices,”
he said.

Holstege said Bianco’s stances on public health rules and orders, and his
outsized influence after appearances on Fox News, only made combating
misinformation about COVID-19 and vaccines more difficult. “It’s made our job 10
times harder,” she said.

Beginning this summer, Bianco and the Sheriff’s Office were also hit with a
series of legal actions from the ACLU and other community organizations in
Riverside County. In July the department was sued over allegations it spent
nearly $5 million of COVID relief funds on upgrades to the department rather
than on helping to curb the virus’ spread or help residents harmed by it.

County leaders and Bianco pushed back against the claims in the suit, arguing
that all the upgrades helped ensure social distancing and were meant to decrease
the risk of transmission.

On Sept. 16 the ACLU wrote a letter to the California Attorney General
requesting a pattern or practice investigation into Bianco’s Sheriff’s
Department. The letter alleges that for years the Sheriff’s Office “demonstrated
a pattern of racist policing practices” as well as high rates of deaths in
custody and a “refusal” to comply with recommendations from a court-mandated
consent decree related to inmate housing and treatment.

According to an ACLU analysis, between 2013 and 2020, a Black person was 1.6
times more likely than a white person to be killed by police in Riverside
County, “an alarming finding that confirms the lived experience of police
brutality reported by our Black community members,” their letter stated.

Between 2013 and 2021 the Sheriff’s Office killed 55 people, more killings per
arrest than 92 percent of other California sheriff’s departments, an ACLU
analysis showed. Between 2019 and 2020, the ACLU said the Sheriff’s Office shot
at people 41 times and that the majority of the incidents involved people who
were “not perceived” to be armed with a gun, but rather a knife or “other
dangerous item.” They contended that many were showing signs of mental health
issues.

The Riverside County Sheriff’s Office did not respond to a request for comment
about these claims.

The Attorney General’s Office declined to comment on any “potential or ongoing”
investigations.

Shaun LeFlore, an organizer for Riverside All of Us or None, a local community
group that signed onto the ACLU letter, told The Daily Beast that he hasn’t been
following the efforts to oust Bianco from office too closely.

Although he believes criticism of Bianco is warranted given his response to the
pandemic and his ties to the Oath Keepers, he said many organizers like himself
in the county are more focused on the systemic issues that he believes a sheriff
like Bianco is a symptom of.

“To us, Chad Bianco is just one person,” he said. “But we’re concerned about a
system that allows that type of bravado to perpetuate and trickle down.”

ANDREW BORYGA

Justice Reporter

@borywritesandrew.boryga@thedailybeast.com

Got a tip? Send it to The Daily Beast here.



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