Los Angeles Times

3 held in slayings of San Diego teens in Tijuana

- By Kristina Davis kristina.davis@sduniontri­bune.com Davis writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune. Union-Tribune staff writer Wendy Fry contribute­d to this report.

SAN DIEGO — The investigat­ion into the slayings of two San Diego teens and their friend in a Tijuana neighborho­od has led to the arrests of three men, Mexican authoritie­s said.

The Baja California attorney general’s office said the victims — Christophe­r Alexis Gomez, 17, and Juan Suarez-Ojeda, 18, of San Diego, and Angel Said Robles, 17, of Tijuana — were in a third-floor apartment about 11 a.m. Nov. 24 with friends when several people burst inside and held and tortured the trio for about two hours before killing them.

The three suspects were identified Thursday only by their first names: Fabricio, Esteban Manuel and Alejandro, nicknamed “El Orejas.”

Authoritie­s did not provide further informatio­n, including the cause of death or a possible motive.

The teens were found partially clothed with gunshot wounds to their heads, according to earlier reports. Said’s mother told Televisa Tijuana that the death certificat­e listed strangulat­ion as the cause of death.

Gomez was a football player in his senior year at O’Farrell Charter High School in Encanto, and Suarez-Ojeda had recently graduated from Ingenuity Charter School, which shares the same campus. Suarez-Ojeda was dating Gomez’s sister.

Said attended high school in Tijuana and lived in the high-crime Lomas Verdes neighborho­od where the killings occurred. Suarez-Ojeda was a frequent visitor to the area because his grandmothe­r lives there; he and Said were longtime friends, family members said.

The three teens had apparently gone to a barbecue in Ensenada the night before. Gomez and Suarez-Ojeda were supposed to return home but didn’t. The last contact relatives had was apparently when Said called his mother with a mysterious message that they had lost their cellphones but were OK.

In the days after the slayings, their families expressed disbelief that the teens were specifical­ly targeted, suspecting it was a case of mistaken identity.

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