Ayotzinapa Investigation Concludes With No Real Evidence

There were some inconsistencies in the case

MEXICO.- Once the eight day of "Acción Global por Ayotzinapa" (Global Action for Ayotzinapa) ended, four months after the Iguala massacre, Mexico's Attorney General, Jesús Murillo Karam, restated his office's conclusions about the case, that although there is now DNA evidence, they are almost 100% sure the teacher trainees were murdered and burned in a Cocula, Guerrero state dumpster, without any military intervention.

The Attorney General's Office based their conclusions on the statements of people that have been apprehended, whose confessions present a doubtful version of events, full of inconsistencies regarding what happened on September 26th. Altogether, 39 confessions and 386 statements were gathered, alongside forensic evidence that lead to the conclusion of the 43 students' death, during a press conference that took place yesterday, Tuesday 27th.

According to Karam "The high number of bone fragments that was found, had thermal exposure to direct fire, which scientifically proves the statements of those apprehended, that say that once the fire was out, the human remains were grounded for an easy disappearance and hard identification."

He narrated the conclusion, classifying this version as "the historic truth of the facts", with the support of "El Cepillo", a lieutenant of the Guerreros Unidos cartel who confess to having killed 15 of the 43 teacher trainees. The rest were already dead when they were given to him for incineration.

Previously it had been said the remains of student Alexander More had been identified in a Cocula dumpster, although Argentinean experts stated that they weren't sure they were found where the Mexican authorities said they were.

After revealing said suspicions as truthful, Twitter was flooded with disbelief, rage and indignation due to the idea of an inefficient justice system which supposedly prefers to closed down a case in order to not interrupt this year's elections.

In spite of the accusations, Murillo Karam assured that the case will continue until everyone who participated in the massacre is arrested, material and intellectually. Everyone involved is looking up to 140 years in prison. Currently, 99 apprehensions had been reported and 6 arrest warrants are still pending.

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elizabeth.rosales@sandiegored.com

zyanya.figueroa@sandiegored.com

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