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Investigation by the Mexican Organization Against Corruption and Impunity (MCCI) contradictions revealed in the court file against Mario Aburto, Suspected author of Luis Donaldo Colosio's homicide in the Lomas Taurinas neighborhood, in Tijuana, in the state of Baja California.
Inconsistent testimonies, tortures inflicted on the accused, unpublished documents and pressure from the authority are the revelations that have emerged 25 years after the events where The former presidential candidate of Mexico lost his life in 1994 by the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the newspaper reveals The country.
The journalist Laura Sánchez had access to documents, testimonies, photographs and extracts from the preliminary inquiry which were not included in the public version of the disappearance of the Office of the Attorney General of the Republic (PGR).
Aburto first acknowledged that he had planned the murder and that he had acted alone, but the record revealed that he had retracted two months later. He added that the police officers who arrested him told him that he had to declare that he belonged to "an armed group or a political group".
Video without censure of the murder of Luis Donaldo Colosio in Lomas Taurinas, Tijuana.
According to the record, they tortured him and "An agent told him that President Salinas de Gortari was on the phone and I wanted to negotiate with him. And what the declarant wanted the president to give him, but that the voice had to pay attention to what he said and said preferably that he had paid a political party.
There were also contradictions in the statements of the Colosio security team. According to the MCCI investigation, one of them, Fernando de la Sota, said he saw the body of the former candidate face up, bleeding in the abdomen, but the expertise indicated that the body was upside down.
Sota shouted to his partner Hector Javier Hernandez "get out of there" when he tried to approach Colosio when he noticed that his left side was not protected.
Evidence regarding the presence of gunpowder was positive in the hands of Antonio Sánchez Ortega, a member of the Center for Research and National Security (CISEN), although in his statement and use of arms during the participation at the event of the campaign where the homicide occurred.
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