Tuesday, November 4, 2014

The capture Tuesday of a fugitive Mexican mayor suspected of ordering the disappearance of 43 college students raises expectations of progress in the unsuccessful five-week-long search for the missing men.


But it also is probably making several politicians and other officials nervous, given their long-standing tolerance of — even support for — the mayor and his wife, despite her well-known connection to drug traffickers.


Jose Luis Abarca and his wife, Maria de los Angeles Pineda, were arrested by an elite unit of federal police before dawn in a modest neighborhood of Mexico City, police spokesman Jose Ramon Salinas said. Their detention came more than a month after the mayor took a leave of absence in the Guerrero city of Iguala and the couple went on the lam.


Mexican mayor and wife arrested in disappearance of 43 students

They were transported to installations of the federal attorney general’s office that specialize in organized-crime investigations, where they were being interrogated, authorities said.


In a brief appearance before journalists, Atty. Gen. Jesus Murillo Karam said investigators were able to pinpoint the couple’s whereabouts because they chose to hide in a house that appeared abandoned. A third person was arrested for helping them hide, Murillo said.


Monte Alejandro Rubido, the national security commissioner, said investigators traced the couple’s relatives and associates and narrowed the search to Mexico City and Monterrey.


Rogelio Ortega, the acting governor of Guerrero, predicted that the detention of Abarca would serve as a key piece to the puzzle of the missing students.


The capture “represents the possibility of finding substantive clues of what really happened … and [could allow] a more precise search,” Ortega told the Televisa television network.


He said the couple’s statements could also lead to the fall of other politicians.


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Parents of the missing students welcomed the arrest of the man they blame for their children’s disappearance but said locating the students should remain the authorities’ priority.


“For us, this is news that will assure us that we will get our young people back; it was the piece that was missing,” Felipe de la Cruz, a father, told Milenio TV.


Searches thus far of miles of rural terrain, based in part on information from detained suspects, have turned up mass graves but not the students.


Abarca took a leave of absence after the students, last seen being led away by local police, went missing Sept. 26 and just before the discovery by federal authorities of about a dozen hidden graves on the outskirts of Iguala. He and his wife, the sister of two late lieutenants in the Beltran Leyva drug cartel, quickly vanished and had been sought by federal authorities since.


Related Story: Mexico focuses on new mass grave in students disappearance

Related Story: Mexico focuses on new mass grave in students’ disappearance Tracy Wilkinson Mexican authorities Tuesday announced the arrest of another suspect in the disappearance of 43 college students and said they were working with the most solid clues to date in finding the youths whereabouts centering on a mass grave at a trash dump near the city of Iguala. Mexican authorities Tuesday announced the arrest of another suspect in the disappearance of 43 college students and said they were working with the most solid clues to date in finding the youths whereabouts centering on a mass grave at a trash dump near the city of Iguala. ( Tracy Wilkinson ) –>

Atty. Gen. Murillo last month said the couple were believed to have ordered local police to intercept and do away with the students, from a rural college for the poor, who were en route to Iguala and might have planned to disrupt a party and speech by Pineda.


The case soon revealed the deep infiltration by drug gangs of police and City Hall in Iguala, about 80 miles south of Mexico City, and in other municipalities in Guerrero state. The governor, Angel Aguirre, was forced to resign amid the scandal, which has also handed President Enrique Peña Nieto his worst security crisis in nearly two years of government.


More than 50 people have been arrested in connection with the disappearances, the majority of them police officers or members of the local drug gang Guerreros Unidos, all of whom authorities say were working in cahoots. Murillo said confessions from some of the detained revealed that Pineda was the “principal operator” of Guerreros Unidos in Iguala.


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