Feds will take a case of teuchitlán crematorium in Jalisco

Federal and local officials in Mexico have been in control of damage since the horrible discovery last week by a civil research group in an alleged cartel training base in the state of Jalisco.
Reference The discovery of an underground crematoriaTitles from around the world this week refer to the Ranch An “extermination camp” and a “Apparent mass killings site.” The Journal Reforma even labeled him “Mexico is Auschwitz.”
Friday, President Claudia Sheinbaum confirmed that the Federal Prosecutor’s Office (FGR) would resume the case. It came one day after having demanded that the authorities of Jalisco publish a full report on the Ranch, which was discovered last September.
“It is imperative that we were carrying out a complete investigation before drawing conclusions,” she said, adding that the FGR would submit a report next week. Sheinbaum has also criticized the precipitation to the judgment precipitated by “some photos and speculations”.
Wednesday, the governor of Jalisco, Pablo Lemus, met with members of the Sheinbaum security firm, Say in an article on social networks that his administration had accepted “joint actions” with the federal government.
Lemus, who was only in office, quickly moved away from his predecessor, Enrique Alfaro, who was governor when the ranch was found. The two men are members of the opposition party Movimiento Ciudadano.
Lemus said that it will not allow the scandal to be swept under the carpet, it does not matter who could be found guilty of crimes, whether by omission or commission “.
Alfaro’s social media accounts have been bombed With questions and accusations since the news broke out.
The Teuchitlán Ranch – located 60 kilometers (37 miles) west of the Guadalajara state capital – was discovered by the troops of the National Guard, but the site was not obtained even after the Office of the State Prosecutor carried out an inspection. The civil servants did not report any conclusion and the investigation was calm.
On March 5, the Jalisco Search Warriors, a group of citizens looking for missing parents, visited the site on a tip. They had access by simply pushing a unlocked door.
The leader of the Indira Navarro research warriors accused Alfaro of having “tried to hide this type of situation or discovery”, asking how state investigators with technology and training could not have found what his group “used only the pick, the shovel and the metal bar”.
According to government data, more than 120,000 people have disappeared in Mexico.
With reports from The day,, Western,, Los Angeles Times And Infobae