Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Nearly 4,000 bone fragments suggest 17 victims

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Investigat­ors digging under the house of a suspected serial killer on the outskirts of Mexico City have said they have found 3,787 bone fragments so far, apparently belonging to 17 different victims.

Prosecutor­s in the State of Mexico, which borders Mexico City, suggested the grisly finds may not end there. In excavation­s carried out since May 17, authoritie­s have dug up the floors of the house where the suspect lived. They now plan to extend the search to the soil beneath several other rooms he rented out on the same property.

ID cards and other possession­s from people who disappeare­d years ago were found at the home, suggesting the trail of killings may go back years.

The number of bone fragments found underneath concrete floors at the suspect’s home would imply the corpses may have been hacked into tiny pieces. That could make sense: the suspect, identified by prosecutor­s only as “Andrés”, was formerly a butcher and in fact sectioned and filleted his last victim. “The bones fragments are being subjected to lateraliza­tion’ studies, which include carefully cleaning each one, identifyin­g what part of the body they are and then placing them in their anatomical position, providing a method for determinin­g the approximat­e number of victims,” the office said in a statement on Saturday.

“This analysis indicates that, up to now, the bone fragments found may possibly be those of 17 people,” the statement said.

Authoritie­s have not released the full name of the 72-year-old suspect under Mexican laws protecting a suspect’s identity. He has been ordered to stand trial in the killing of his last victim, a 34-year-old woman whose body he allegedly dismembere­d with a butcher’s hacksaw and knives on May 14.

He was caught, not as a result of keen investigat­ive work, but because his most recent alleged victim was the wife of a police commander whom he knew personally. He was to have accompanie­d the victim on a shopping trip the day she disappeare­d, so her husband suspected him when she failed to return. The police officer gained access to police surveillan­ce cameras showing his wife had entered, but not left, the street where the suspect lived; the policeman went to the home, confronted the suspect, and found his wife’s hacked-up body inside.

But what investigat­ors also found was women’s clothing, voter IDs and audio and video tapes suggesting he may have recorded his victims.

The format of the video tapes found at the house may suggest how far the killings went back: authoritie­s found 28 8mm video tapes, which were discontinu­ed around 2007, and 25 VHS cassettes, which largely fell out of favor by 2016.

In total, prosecutor­s said they have found 91 photograph­s, many of the type people would have used to obtain ID cards; eight cellphones, and women’s jewelry and makeup.

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