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At the end of January, a 16-year-old boy appeared in front of the Morelos prosecutor's office report the disappearance of their parents, said mortified that he had tried to contact them repeatedly on his cellphone without success.
On January 21, they were on the Camino Antiguo up to Santa Martha, coming from Colonia Cerritos de García, in the town of Ahuatepec, in the municipality of Cuernavaca. bagged bodies of Alejandro "N" and Martha "N".
The corpses were wrapped in black plastic bags wrapped in cinnamon tape. They had knife wounds.
After conducting various expert reports and collecting testimonies, the authorities began to suspect the son of the couple who had initially reported the disappearance.
By means of a search warrant issued by the trial judge in charge of the control, the oral proceedings and the execution of the state of Morelos, the authorities showed up at the deceased's home in Colonia La Cañada, in the city of Ahuatepec.
During the investigations, they found traces of blood, fragments of cinnamon ribbon and children's shoes splattered with blood, as well as a knife.
The investigations led the police to the home of a teenage friend, where incriminating cues were also found inside a taxi.
The couple's son and his friend fell into contradictions and ended up confessing the crime. They claimed to have committed double murder as part of a test aimed at penetrating a drug trafficking cell operating in the area.
The authorities are looking for a third person who would have been involved. He is a taxi driver who belongs to the criminal group to which the children aspired to enter.
L & # 39; infamous Cartel Jalisco New Generation (CJNG) It raises young people to submit them to difficult training camps in which they must learn to use high caliber weapons, to eat human flesh to show their loyalty.
"For at least 10 days, they were trained in the handling of weapons, tactics of defense and combat. The training started with weapons from which they threw paint, "says the report.
According to Semáforo Delictivo, Morelos is leading national statistics on high-impact crime. It doubles the national average for homicides and ranks fifth among kidnappings. Most cases are related to organized crime.
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