News (Media Awareness Project) - Mexico: Ad For A Missing American Son Draws 200 Calls |
Title: | Mexico: Ad For A Missing American Son Draws 200 Calls |
Published On: | 1999-12-02 |
Source: | Christian Science Monitor (US) |
Fetched On: | 2008-09-05 14:09:58 |
AD FOR A MISSING AMERICAN SON DRAWS 200 CALLS
AUSTIN, TEXAS -- From his home in El Paso, Texas, Jaime Hervella has mixed
emotions about the search being conducted on the Ortiz ranch south of
Juarez, He believes that his godson, Saul Sanchez Jr., is among the bodies
to be found on the ranch.
But part of him still doesn't want to accept that Mr. Sanchez, a US Navy
veteran and electronic surveillance expert hired by the Mexican federal
police, is dead. All he knows is that on May 24, 1994, Sanchez disappeared
on the way home to his young son's birthday.
"We went to the Mexican authorities, and there was no one there that gave a
hoot about our dear one," says Mr. Hervella, Sanchez's godfather and an El
Paso business consultant. "The authorities took it that anything to do with
the drug cartels isn't going to be solved anyway, so you can avoid the
obligation to investigate."
After months of wrangling with Mexican authorities, Hervella and the
Sanchez family decided to place an ad in the local newspaper, asking if
other citizens had lost loved ones. The next day, they got 100 calls; the
day after, they got 100 more. Today, Hervella's organization, the
International Association of Relatives and Friends of Disappeared Persons,
counts 196 persons who disappeared in Juarez, 18 of them American citizens.
Hervella credits his group with forcing Mexican government to appoint a
special prosecutor to investigate the disappearances, and with getting the
FBI involved. "The only reason they had a prosecutor is because of us," he
says. FBI agents have called the Sanchez family for Saul's dental records.
"I know they are in there," he says.
AUSTIN, TEXAS -- From his home in El Paso, Texas, Jaime Hervella has mixed
emotions about the search being conducted on the Ortiz ranch south of
Juarez, He believes that his godson, Saul Sanchez Jr., is among the bodies
to be found on the ranch.
But part of him still doesn't want to accept that Mr. Sanchez, a US Navy
veteran and electronic surveillance expert hired by the Mexican federal
police, is dead. All he knows is that on May 24, 1994, Sanchez disappeared
on the way home to his young son's birthday.
"We went to the Mexican authorities, and there was no one there that gave a
hoot about our dear one," says Mr. Hervella, Sanchez's godfather and an El
Paso business consultant. "The authorities took it that anything to do with
the drug cartels isn't going to be solved anyway, so you can avoid the
obligation to investigate."
After months of wrangling with Mexican authorities, Hervella and the
Sanchez family decided to place an ad in the local newspaper, asking if
other citizens had lost loved ones. The next day, they got 100 calls; the
day after, they got 100 more. Today, Hervella's organization, the
International Association of Relatives and Friends of Disappeared Persons,
counts 196 persons who disappeared in Juarez, 18 of them American citizens.
Hervella credits his group with forcing Mexican government to appoint a
special prosecutor to investigate the disappearances, and with getting the
FBI involved. "The only reason they had a prosecutor is because of us," he
says. FBI agents have called the Sanchez family for Saul's dental records.
"I know they are in there," he says.
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