Current:Home > NewsPolice chief shot dead days after activist, wife and daughter killed in Mexico -Wealth Momentum Network
Police chief shot dead days after activist, wife and daughter killed in Mexico
View
Date:2025-04-13 19:22:44
Mexico City's police operations chief was killed in the capital on Sunday just three days after an Indigenous rights defender and his family were killed in the country, authorities said — the latest in a series of attacks targeting police, activists and politicians across Mexico.
"As a result of a cowardly attack that occurred in Coacalco, Mexico State, my colleague and friend Chief Commissioner Milton Morales Figueroa lost his life," a local security secretary Pablo Vazquez said on social media, vowing to "identify, arrest and bring those responsible to justice."
The officer, who was in charge of intelligence operations fighting organized crime, was outside a poultry store when he was accosted by a man who shot him, according to security camera footage.
"Milton was in charge of important investigative tasks to protect the peace and security of the residents of Mexico City," Mayor Marti Batres wrote on social media.
Small drug trafficking and smuggling cells operating in the megacity are connected to some of the country's powerful drug cartels such as the powerful Jalisco Cartel New Generation (CJNG).
The Jalisco cartel is better known for producing millions of doses of deadly fentanyl and smuggling them into the United States disguised to look like Xanax, Percocet or oxycodone. Such pills cause about 70,000 overdose deaths per year in the United States.
Local media reported that Figueroa's work had helped dismantle some gangs.
While several police chiefs have been targeted in other Mexican states plagued by criminal violence recent years, attacks against authorities in the capital have been rare.
Activist, wife and daughter murdered
A Mexican Indigenous rights defender was killed alongside his wife and daughter when unknown assailants riddled their car with bullets and set it ablaze, a prosecutor's office said Friday.
Lorenzo Santos Torres, 53, and his family were traveling in a pickup truck along a highway in the southern state of Oaxaca when they were intercepted and shot on Thursday.
The attackers then set fire to the vehicle with the passengers inside, the state prosecutor's office said.
"We condemn the violent way in which the crime was committed," state prosecutor Bernardo Rodriguez Alamilla told reporters, suggesting the attack could have been motivated by "revenge."
Santos Torres was an active human rights campaigner in Oaxaca.
According to the local Center for Human Rights and Advice to Indigenous Peoples (Cedhapi), the activist had received threats for his work defending the political, social and land rights of Indigenous communities.
"Lorenzo Santos Torres opposed injustices committed by the municipal authorities of Santiago Amoltepec (town)," said Cedhapi, calling for the killers to be punished.
Several human rights activists have been murdered in recent years in Mexico, which has long grappled with violence linked to drug trafficking and ancestral disputes over agricultural land.
The country of 126 million people has seen more than 450,000 people murdered since the government of then-president Felipe Calderon launched a military offensive against drug cartels in 2006.
- In:
- Drug Cartels
- Mexico
- Murder
- Cartel
veryGood! (42771)
Related
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Missing snow has made staging World Cup cross country ski race a steep climb in Minnesota
- Score one for red, the color, thanks to Taylor, Travis and the red vs. red Super Bowl
- The Georgia House has approved a $5 billion boost to the state budget
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- U.S. detects and tracks 4 Russian warplanes flying in international airspace off Alaska coast
- Morally questionable, economically efficient
- Taylor Swift adds surprise songs to every Eras Tour setlist. See all the songs she's played so far
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- California recommends changes to leasing properties under freeways after major fire
Ranking
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- What is Lunar New Year and how is it celebrated?
- AI fakes raise election risks as lawmakers and tech companies scramble to catch up
- Morally questionable, economically efficient
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Former Ohio sheriff’s deputy charged with murder testifies that the man he shot brandished gun
- Donald Glover Shares He Privately Married Michelle White—Then Went to Work on the Same Day
- What to know about South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem’s banishment from the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
Recommendation
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
Truck crashes into New Mexico gas station causing fiery explosion: Watch dramatic video
Super Bowl 2024 on Nickelodeon: What to know about slime-filled broadcast, how to watch
Cargo train locomotive derails in Colorado, spilling 100s of gallons of diesel
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Sebastián Piñera, former president of Chile, dies in helicopter accident
Pakistan votes for a new parliament as militant attacks surge and jailed leader’s party cries foul
On live TV, Guardian Angels rough up a man in Times Square then misidentify him as a ‘migrant’