MEXICO CITY — Mexican forensic experts were working Thursday to identify human remains found in at least 45 bags discovered in a gorge outside the city of Guadalajara.
Authorities discovered the sealed black plastic bags on Tuesday during a search for seven young employees of a local call center who went missing in late May. Testing is expected to show whether the remains — which authorities said are from both male and female victims — are those of the employees.
The bags were apparently tossed into the chasm — about 120 feet deep — from a forest overlook on the northern fringes of Guadalajara.
The apparent kidnapping of the call center workers, five men and two women, has stunned Guadalajara, Mexico’s second-most populous city. The missing workers were in their 20s and 30s, authorities said.
The head of Mexico’s ministry of security told reporters that a preliminary investigation indicates that the workers were involved in “some type of fraud†and telephone extortion. But the sister of one of the workers said that her brother was selling vacation packages at the call center, Spain’s El Pais newspaper reported.
The forlorn marchers filed down Paseo de Reforma, the grand, tree-lined boulevard that runs through the heart of the Mexican capital.
The news of the bags filled with body parts came as thousands descend on the city for the Guadalajara International Film Festival, a weeklong event that kicks off Saturday and draws visitors from across the globe.
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Mexico, plagued by organized crime and drug cartels, has been suffering a decades-long epidemic of disappearances. Some 110,000 people have been listed as officially missing, according to government figures. The state of Jalisco leads with some 15,000 reported disappeared.
The case of the call center employees recalled for many a gruesome episode from 2018, when three film students in Guadalajara went missing, sparking large-scale protests in the city. Police later said that the three were beaten, killed and their bodies dissolved in acid. Officials linked the murders to organized crime.
Jalisco state is home turf of a number of criminal syndicates, including the Jalisco New Generation cartel, among Mexico’s fastest-growing and most violent.
Times staff writer Leila Miller and special correspondent Cecilia Sánchez Vidal contributed to this report.
Foreign correspondent Patrick J. McDonnell is the Los Angeles Times Mexico City bureau chief and previously headed Times bureaus in Beirut, Buenos Aires and Baghdad. A native of the Bronx, McDonnell is a graduate of Columbia’s Graduate School of Journalism and was a Nieman fellow at Harvard.