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International

Zetas: thousands of bones found at Nuevo Leon narco rancho

12:22, Wednesday, 02 September, 2015
Zetas: thousands of bones found at Nuevo Leon narco rancho
    
At least 31,000 fragments of human bones were found on a ranch in Nuevo Leon, (northern Mexico),
which allegedly was used by organized crime to incinerate their victims to dispose of their bodies. Apparently heavy rains unearthed the remains.
If anyone thinks the state of Nuevo Leon has the desire or funds to test thousands of bones, please recall the 2011 cases of narco fosas (clandestine graves) discovered in Tamaulipas (in photo above) and Durango City Durango, over 500 bodies discovered. Government agencies promised forensic studies in all remains found. They called on family members, in those areas, who had missing loved ones, to provide samples of their DNA, to assist attempts in identifying remains, by matching the samples with bodies and bones discovered.
The truth of the matter is that the majority of the remains found were never tested. Families reported that offers of blood samples were refused by authorities, leaving them with the only reasonable conclusion, that testing was not going to be conducted.
Same scenario in the Northeastern state of Coahuila.
    
     In 2014 the federal government made a push into specific areas such as Cinco Manantiales (Five Springs), in search on remains of the thousands of missing persons who vanished in the past decade. Coahuila is the backbone of Los Zetas and is where its premier leaders Lazca was killed, Z40 (Miguel Trevino) arrested and Z42 lived. 42 (Omar Trevino) lived in Cinco Manantiales on his horse ranch.
    
    
Of the 1500+ remains supposedly found on a "narcorancho" in 5 springs, the government implied they belonged to at least 500 people. It was announced they would be “forensically tested”.
    
     We are still waiting for those results and the list of who the remains belong to.
    
    
The government, both state and federal, were in a continuing attack by human rights groups, such as CADHAC, who stopped working with government agencies after years of being fed inaccuracies, fallacy, and fabrications, in hope to quiet families of the missing and human rights organizations. Many were in the mindset that the 5 springs “search” was nothing more than theater.

    
Another element that Tamaulipas, Durango and Coahuila have in common is they are all considered as beigng narco news blackout states. News about organized crime is largely missing in the media, or heavily censored.
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