The first female mayor of Mexican city assassinated day after assuming office
The first woman elected mayor of Temixco, a city in the
central Mexican state of Morelos, was expected to take on organized
crime directly. She never got the chance.
The 33-year-old assumed office on New
Year’s Day. Less than 24 hours later she was dead, murdered in her own home by
an alleged crew of paid assassins.
According to
reports, sometime shortly after 7 a.m. on Saturday morning, intruders entered
Mota’s home, tied her up, beat her, and shot her in the head. Authorities
responding to a call reporting a possible homicide soon found themselves in a
car chase with the suspected killers. A gunfight ensued that left two of the
suspects dead, authorities said, while three others — including a minor, a
32-year-old woman, and an 18-year-old man — were captured alive.
In a statement, the
state prosecutor’s office reported that loads of ammunition, a 9 mm
pistol, an Uzi submachine gun, bulletproof vests, and balaclavas were recovered
from the suspects’ vehicle. One of the detained suspects, a government source
told the Mexican newspaper Reforma,
said the team of assassins was paid roughly $29,000 to murder the mayor —
though it was unclear whether that payment was paid to each of the perpetrators
or to the group — and that her name was one of at least a half-dozen others on
the team’s kill list.
In recent years, areas
around Temixco, some 60 miles south of Mexico City, have struggled mightily
with violence stemming from weak local institutions and deep-seated political
corruption and intimidation linked to a nexus of criminal groups seeking
control of the region’s lucrative, U.S.-bound drug-trafficking routes.
The intercept.com
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