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2 suspects arrested after mother and son murdered while searching for her other missing son in Mexico

2 suspects arrested after mother and son murdered while searching for her other missing son in Mexico

CBS News02-05-2025

Mexican police have arrested two men suspected of murdering a mother and son, who were killed while they searched for her other missing son, prosecutors said Thursday.
Maria del Carmen Morales and her 26-year-old son Jaime Daniel Ramirez Morales were shot dead last week in Jalisco state. Together, they had been searching for another son who went missing last year.
The 43-year-old mother belonged to the Guerreros Buscadores collective, a group that searches for missing relatives. The group's discovery of bones, shoes and clothing at a suspected drug cartel training camp in Jalisco in March shocked Mexico.
In a statement posted to social media after the arrests were announced, Guerreros Buscadores said: "Although nothing can alleviate the pain, it is a step towards justice."
Near midnight on April 23, the attackers opened fire on mother and son from a motorcycle near their home, investigators said, adding that Morales had been trying to defend her son when she was targeted.
The prosecutor's office in the western Jalisco state named the alleged murderers as Juan Manuel N., 27, and Jose Luis N., 24, and said they were suspected of links to a dozen other killings. The prosecutor's office also released images and video of the arrested suspects on social media.
Mexican police have arrested two men suspected of murdering a mother and son, who were killed while they searched for her other missing son, prosecutors said Thursday.
Jalisco State Prosecutor's Office
The search group's grisly find at the cartel training camp in Jalisco shone a spotlight on forced recruitment and other tactics employed by criminal gangs in Mexico, where more than 120,000 people are missing.
Disappearances soared after the government declared war on drug trafficking groups in 2006. Around 480,000 people have been murdered in a spiral of violence since then.
In addition to the discovery at the ranch, other mass graves have been found in recent months in Mexico. In January, at least 56 bodies were discovered in unmarked mass graves in northern Mexico, not far from the border with the United States.
A mass grave discovered in December in a suburb of Guadalajara with dozens of bags of dismembered body parts contained the remains of 24 people, authorities said. That same month, Mexican authorities said they recovered a total of 31 bodies from pits in Chiapas, a state plagued by cartel violence.
Collectives searching for missing persons say that cartels and other organized crime gangs sometimes use ovens to incinerate their victims and leave no trace.

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Chasing ICE: The mad scramble to track immigration raids across L.A. County
Chasing ICE: The mad scramble to track immigration raids across L.A. County

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Chasing ICE: The mad scramble to track immigration raids across L.A. County

Giovanni Garcia pulled up to a dusty intersection in South Gate and scoped the scene. It was quiet, just folks walking home from work, but Garcia was among several people drawn there in hopes of bearing witness to one of the federal raids that have unfolded across Los Angeles County in recent days. Just minutes before, several Instagram accounts had posted alerts warning that white pickup trucks with green U.S. Customs and Border Protection markings had been seen near the intersection. With friends loaded into his white Grand Cherokee and a large Mexican flag flying out of the sunroof, this was the sixth day in a row that Garcia, 28, had spent up to 10 hours following such alerts through South L.A.'s immigrant-heavy neighborhoods. Fueled by sodas and snacks he picked up at a Northgate Market, Garcia's goal, he said, was to catch Immigration and Customs Enforcement or other immigration agents in the act of detaining people on the street. So far, it had been a fruitless chase. 'I've been doing this for six days. It sucks because I get these alerts and go, but I never make it in time,' said Garcia, a Mexican American U.S. citizen who lives in South Central. Read more: L.A. braces for multiple 'No Kings' demonstrations across the city Saturday Monitoring ICE activity has become a grim pastime for some Angelenos. Apps dedicated to the purpose have popped up, which combine with Citizen, Nextdoor, X and other platforms to create a firehose of unverified, user-generated information about federal movements and operations. Trying to keep up in real time can prove equally exhausting and frustrating. The reports sometimes turn out to be false, and immigration enforcers seem to strike and depart with swift precision, leaving the public little opportunity to respond. It's impossible to determine how many people are engaged in this Sisyphean chase. 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Why they protest: Voices from the downtown L.A. ICE demonstrations
Why they protest: Voices from the downtown L.A. ICE demonstrations

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time2 hours ago

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Why they protest: Voices from the downtown L.A. ICE demonstrations

During a week of protest, Los Angeles is the center stage of the national immigration debate, with pundits on both sides characterizing the fight through the lens of their respective viewpoints. Not everyone is pleased with the actions — there has been vandalism, destruction and injuries — isolated yet striking moments that have at times overshadowed peaceful demonstrations. But for many out in the demonstrations, there was a message that they wanted to be heard. During these demonstrations, Los Angeles Times reporters on the ground have interviewed protesters and asked them why they're demonstrating. Here's what they had to say: Alejandra Flores attended a protest in front of Westin LAX Friday with her daughter and her mother, who had recently become a U.S. citizen. Maritza Perez Huerta attended her first protest this week. She couldn't make it out to protests a couple of years ago because she was younger and her mother was afraid. Priscilla Ramos spent her first day of protesting in front of the Metropolitan Detention Center this week, where Marines were expected to arrive. Cynthia Guardano was born in the United States in a mixed-status family. She was downtown demonstrating on Friday. Jason Petty, a 46-year-old musician from Boyle Heights, told The Times he went to a rally because 'this is our community — immigration is us.' Petty, a former ninth-grade history teacher, said he was born and raised in Los Angeles and was here during the 1992 riots. He is Black, and his grandmother lived in Watts during the 1965 Watts riots. His father was a Black Panther. Petty said he has a daughter in fourth grade and that immigration agents recently came to the neighborhood near her school. He said he has had to have difficult conversations with her, assuring her she's safe, and why it was important to go to the rally. Outside City Hall in Santa Ana this week, Alicia Rojas observed a protest from afar. The Colombian native had her amnesty application denied as a child. Now a U.S. citizen, Rojas grew up during the era of Proposition 187 and remembered all the racism against people like her at the time. Michelle Hernandez, 19, marched at the federal building with a Mexican flag draped over her shoulders. A daughter of Mexican immigrants, she said she had been worried about family members and friends during the ICE raids. Franchesca Olivas drove two hours alone from Hemet to attend the anti-ICE demonstration this week outside the Metropolitan Detention Center in downtown Los Angeles. She was carrying an upside-down American flag attached to the Mexican flag because she's half-white and half-Mexican. Aaron Fontan, 24, said he also has participated in Black Lives Matter protests and felt familiar police pushback and militance this time around. However, he felt that not as many people are willing to show up to anti-ICE protests. Beyond the protests, some civic leaders have also voiced their opposition to the escalation in immigration enforcement. Los Angeles Unified School District Supt. Alberto Carvalho, the son of immigrants, has been outspoken about his mission to protect students: Service Employees International Union California President David Huerta was injured and detained while documenting an immigration enforcement raid in downtown L.A. last week. Times staff writers Christopher Buchanan and Annie Goodykoontz contributed to this report.

Chasing ICE: The mad scramble to track immigration raids across L.A. County
Chasing ICE: The mad scramble to track immigration raids across L.A. County

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Chasing ICE: The mad scramble to track immigration raids across L.A. County

Giovanni Garcia pulled up to a dusty intersection in South Gate and scoped the scene. It was quiet, just folks walking home from work, but Garcia was among several people drawn there in hopes of bearing witness to one of the federal raids that have unfolded across Los Angeles County in recent days. Just minutes before, several Instagram accounts had posted alerts warning that white pickup trucks with green U.S. Customs and Border Protection markings had been seen near the intersection. With friends loaded into his white Grand Cherokee and a large Mexican flag flying out of the sunroof, this was the sixth day in a row that Garcia, 28, had spent up to 10 hours following such alerts through South L.A.'s immigrant-heavy neighborhoods. Fueled by sodas and snacks he picked up at a Northgate Market, Garcia's goal, he said, was to catch Immigration and Customs Enforcement or other immigration agents in the act of detaining people on the street. So far, it had been a fruitless chase. 'I've been doing this for six days. It sucks because I get these alerts and go, but I never make it in time,' said Garcia, a Mexican American U.S. citizen who lives in South Central. Monitoring ICE activity has become a grim pastime for some Angelenos. Apps dedicated to the purpose have popped up, which combine with Citizen, Nextdoor, X and other platforms to create a firehose of unverified, user-generated information about federal movements and operations. Trying to keep up in real time can prove equally exhausting and frustrating. The reports sometimes turn out to be false, and immigration enforcers seem to strike and depart with swift precision, leaving the public little opportunity to respond. It's impossible to determine how many people are engaged in this Sisyphean chase. But they have become a frequent sight in recent days, as anger has grown in response to viral videos of swift and violent apprehensions. A Times reporter and photographer crisscrossed the southern half of L.A. County, encountering Garcia and other ICE chasers in hot pursuit of federal agents who constantly seemed one step ahead. A new notification popped up on Garcia's Instagram feed Thursday afternoon: ICE agents had been spotted in a nondescript residential area of South Gate, a city of about 90,000 people, of which more than 40% are foreign-born, according to the U.S. census. So Garcia put his SUV in gear and sped over. He and his crew were late again. They arrived on a corner about 15 minutes after witnesses say immigration agents with green bulletproof vests and gaiters over their faces had jumped out of vehicles, handcuffed and taken away a man who had sold flowers in front of a ranch-style house there for years. 'I keep doing this because they're messing with my people,' Garcia said. 'It's no longer about immigration. Trump's no longer targeting criminals; he's targeting Hispanics.' It was one of many such raids in South L.A. in recent days at homes, parks and businesses ranging from a car wash to grocery stores. The people whisked away in incidents captured in photos and videos that bystanders shared online ran the gamut: One man plucked out of a diverse crowd for no discernible reason while walking in South Gate Park. Another handcuffed on the curb outside a Ross clothing store in Bell Gardens. Two men in Rosemead snatched from the parking lot of a bakery. Workers at a Fashion Nova clothing warehouse in Vernon told The Times that ICE trucks had been spotted in the area and that they had heard agents planned to confront employees during a shift change. From senior citizens to children, nobody was safe from the federal enforcement effort. Jasmyn Vasillio, 35, said she first became concerned when she saw on social media that ICE agents had raided a car wash in South Gate, then an hour later saw a post about the flower seller's apprehension. 'I knew that flower guy is always there and I live nearby so I drove right over,' she said as she stood on the corner where he had been standing 20 minutes earlier. 'I think they're just picking people up and leaving.' A 20-year-old Latino man who declined to provide his name out of fear of reprisal said that he has been doing everything he can to spread awareness of what immigration enforcement agents are doing in his South Gate neighborhood and across South L.A. 'I'm a U.S. citizen, so I'm good. I'm worried about other people. It's been heartbreaking,' he said as he streamed live from a street in South Gate where CBP agents had been spotted minutes before, according to posts he had seen on Instagram. 'They're here to work and being torn apart from their families,' he said. 'It's sad. They came here for the American dream and this is what happens.' Teenagers Emmanuel Segura and Jessy Villa said they have spent hours over the past week scrolling through social media and despairing at the seemingly endless stream of videos of people being aggressively detained. They felt helpless in the face of the crackdown, so they planned a protest in the heart of their own community. On Thursday, they took to Atlantic Avenue and Firestone Boulevard in South Gate, where Villa waved a flag pole with both American and Mexican flags affixed to it. They were joined by more than 30 other protesters who chanted slogans and hoisted anti-ICE posters. Drivers honked in support as they passed by. 'It's kind of scary. They're taking anyone at this point. I just saw that ICE went to a car wash and took two people. And those are hard-working people — they are not criminals,' Segura, a 15-year-old South Gate resident, said. 'So we planned the protest to go against ICE, Trump and his administration.' Villa, 14, lives in nearby Lynwood, where he says everyone he knows is terrified they or someone they care about will be the next person swept up in an ICE raid. 'The streets are empty. Nobody wants to come outside. And kids don't want to go to school, especially kids who migrated here,' Villa said. 'They're scared going to school in the morning, and worried they'll come home and find out their parents were deported.' Five miles away in Vernon, Manolo stood Thursday morning on the loading dock of the candle-making business he owns as employees loaded boxes of candles into the back of a black SUV. He said he has been following news and rumors of the raids online, and that the fear generated by them and the protests in response have been devastating for his company and other small businesses. 'Everybody's worried about it,' Manolo said, recounting how he had heard that earlier that day ICE had raided a business two doors over from his. His company received zero calls for orders Thursday morning, down from the 50 to 60 it typically receives per day. If the immigration raids and protests haven't wound down by the end of the month, he said he might have to shut down his business. 'This whole snatching people on the street — they have you on the floor in handcuffs, traumatize you, why? It makes me nervous, of course,' said Manolo, a U.S. citizen who moved to the U.S. from Guatemala 33 years ago and declined to give his last name out of fear he and his company could be targeted by law enforcement. 'And it's not just that, it's affecting businesses, it's affecting people's lives. It affects the economy, law enforcement. It affects your daily routine. When's it going to end?'

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