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Veracruz state police stand at roadblock along the highway leaving Coatzacoalcos, Mexico on 2 July 2017.
Veracruz state police stand at roadblock along the highway leaving Coatzacoalcos, Mexico, on 2 July 2017. Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP
Veracruz state police stand at roadblock along the highway leaving Coatzacoalcos, Mexico, on 2 July 2017. Photograph: Rebecca Blackwell/AP

Mexico police charged with using death squad tactics on drug suspects

This article is more than 6 years old

Veracruz police picked up youths and turned them over to specialized interrogation and torture squads, according to indictment

Police in Mexico’s corruption-plagued state of Veracruz set up units that used death squad-style tactics to abduct, kill and dispose of at least 15 people who they suspected of being drug cartel informers and drug runners, according to charges filed by state prosecutors.

The allegations filed against the former top police commanders in Veracruz show all the signs of the human rights abuses of Mexico’s notorious anti-guerrilla counterinsurgency campaigns of the 1960s and 70s.

Police in marked patrol cars picked up youths but never recorded their arrests. Instead they turned them over to specialized interrogation and torture squads working at the police academy itself, according to the indictment, and they were later killed and their bodies disposed of.

While individual groups of corrupt cops have been known to turn youths over to drug cartels in several areas of Mexico, the Veracruz state case is notable for the rank of those accused: the former head of state security and the leaders of at least two police divisions have been charged, suggesting that the disappearances were state policy under the former governor Javier Duarte, who is in jail facing corruption charges.

“This is the first time they have charged people in significant numbers and of significant rank and demonstrated that there was an organized, structured governmental apparatus that had an agreed-on, systemic method to carry out a policy of disappearing people,” said Juan Carlos Gutiérrez, a lawyer who specializes in human rights cases.

“The groundbreaking thing is that prosecutors built a case by demonstrating there was a whole governmental structure that was designed to disappear people,” he said.

Mexico’s military and federal police were widely accused of systematic, state-sponsored torture and disappearances as they pursued leftist rebels in the mountainous southern state of Guerrero in the 1960s and 1970s.

In contrast the disappearances in Veracruz between 2013 and 2014 were urban and brazen: in one case, a highway policewoman referred to in court records as Jaqueline was tortured after being detained while riding in a taxi after finishing her shift, according to the charges.

Police accused the driver of carrying a small amount of cocaine.

But neither the taxi driver nor Jaqueline, his passenger, were ever formally booked, arraigned or brought before a judge.

In court testimony, Jaqueline recounted a chilling procedure similar to those allegedly used in other cases: she and the driver were forced to get out of the taxi.

The officers who detained them then turned them over to the police “rapid reaction” squad – also known as los fieles or “the loyal ones” – who took them to a police academy where they said they were tortured and beaten.

After four days, Jaqueline was released, apparently because her captors realized she really was a police officer. But the taxi driver was never heard from again.

According to documents read in court, it was a pattern repeated in at least 14 other cases. The victims were mostly young men pulled from streets, roadsides or vehicles, on suspicion they were acting as lookouts for the Zetas drug cartel.

They were apparently picked up if an initial police inspection turned up suspicious messages on their cellphones.

After that, they were allegedly taken to the police academy, and from there they disappeared without a trace.

Nineteen current or former Veracruz state police officials and officers are now on trial facing charges of “forced disappearance”, including the state’s former public safety secretary – in effect the top police commander – and his directors of special forces, prisons and state police.

The victims included two women and two minors

The episode has drawn comparisons with the 1970s military counterinsurgency campaigns in Latin America, when detentions led to clandestine torture cells on military bases, and then unmarked graves.

Hundreds of unmarked graves have been found in Veracruz, but only a few of the bodies have been identified.

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