Sunday, May 25, 2025

Interpol red notice issued for ex-Puebla governor: attorney general

Federal authorities requested a “red alert” from Interpol for the arrest of former Puebla governor Mario Marín, the attorney general said yesterday.

Alejandro Gertz Manero told a press conference that a federal court made the request at the same time that arrest warrants for the ex-governor and four accomplices were issued on April 11 in connection with the 2005 torture of investigative journalist Lydia Cacho.

He said Interpol has been actively searching in the 194 member countries affiliated with the international police organization.

“The same day that we received the arrest warrant that we asked for, [Interpol] issued the red alert, and whoever says differently is not telling the truth.”

However, there is no notice listed for Marín on the Interpol website nor does his name turn up anywhere on the site.

Cacho was detained by Puebla police in Cancún in 2005 on defamation charges following the release of her book, The Demons of Eden, which exposed a pedophilia ring.

Cacho faced torture and abuse while in custody, and the case became a national scandal when a tape was leaked of a conversation between one of the supposed leaders of the pedophilia ring, Kamel Nacif, and Marín plotting to punish the journalist.

Last week, police apprehended Juan Sánchez Moreno, a former official in the Puebla Attorney General’s Office and one of the key suspects in the investigation, but Cacho accused federal authorities on Twitter of allowing Marín, Nacif and their accomplices time to escape by not requesting the alert from Interpol at the same time as the arrest warrant.

The attorney general declined to comment on the search’s progress and whether authorities know the current location of the fugitive former governor.

Source: El Financiero (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Protest in a downtown street of San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas, with a line of people marching. At the front of the crowd, people are holding a white sign with black and agua-blue letters saying "We demand worthy water for San Cristobal de las Casas."

San Cristóbal de Las Casas: Where does all the water go?

0
In San Cristóbal de Las Casas, locals are fighting for the right to reliable potable water amid corporate extraction concessions, aging infrastructure and health risks.

The MND News Quiz of the week: May 24th

4
Film festivals, naval ships and a lucky cyclist: How much attention have you been paying to the news this week?
Clients wait in line at Western Union, a popular money transfer service.

Any remittance tax is ‘absolutely unjust,’ Sheinbaum says, after US House lowers proposed tax to 3.5%

3
Millions of Mexican families would be impacted by the tax, which officials say violates treaties prohibiting double taxation.