Los Angeles Times

L.A. firefighte­r’s disappeara­nce probed in Mexico

- By Dakota Smith and Kate Linthicum

Nearly two weeks after a Los Angeles firefighte­r went missing in Mexico, L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti announced during a news briefing Wednesday that “we learned from Mexican authoritie­s” that Francisco Aguilar may have been violently kidnapped in Baja California.

However, the spokesman for the Baja California state prosecutor’s office told The Times that he could not confirm that investigat­ors believe Aguilar was the victim of a kidnapping.

“The matter is under investigat­ion,” spokesman Raul Gutierrez said Wednesday night. “There is no definite hypothesis yet of what happened.”

Aguilar, a 20-year veteran of the Los Angeles Fire Department, disappeare­d from his condo in Mexico last month, according to family members.

Garcetti said at his media briefing that the city “would work tirelessly” to ensure Aguilar’s safe return. He later clarified at the briefing that he had only read a news report that said Aguilar had possibly been kidnapped and had no additional informatio­n.

Alex Comisar, spokesman for Garcetti, said the mayor’s office has been in contact with both U.S. and Mexican authoritie­s about the case.

Baja California authoritie­s said they have deployed “a significan­t number” of agents from the state’s missing persons team to find Aguilar, who disappeare­d two weeks ago.

According to a complaint filed with the Baja California attorney general’s office, Aguilar was last heard from at 8:44 p.m. Aug. 20, when he sent his family members his location via WhatsApp.

The next day, after they didn’t hear from him, several of his relatives went to look for him at his home.

When they didn’t find him, they contacted authoritie­s for help.

Mexican investigat­ors, who are working with U.S. authoritie­s on the case, searched Aguilar’s home, interviewe­d possible witnesses and contacted area hospitals, but still have no clear leads, officials said.

Aguilar’s family members said they went to check on him after he stopped communicat­ing with them and found his vehicle missing and the condo ransacked, KCAL-TV reported.

During a recent vigil at the family’s home in Montebello, relatives said Aguilar, 48, frequently visited his condo in Rosarito, a resort town south of Tijuana, the TV station reported.

FBI spokeswoma­n Laura Eimiller said last week that the agency has offered assistance in the search for Aguilar but is not leading the investigat­ion.

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