This one made me cry, though I do admit to being soft. I remember stories of the original massacre, but nothing prepared me for the full horror of the story. In March 2011, members of a drug cartel rounded up various people, including many innocent civilians in and around Allende, Coahuila, Mexico. Allende is in northern Mexico, near the Texan border so I am assuming that is why the story got the coverage that it did.
The audiobook takes us back before the massacre and the reasoning behind the massacre. Basically, the journalist states that the US DEA got some very important intelligence on this particular cartel (Los Zetas) who had been running drugs into the USA. The informant was adamant that the information stay out of the hands of the Mexican authorities. Senior level DEA agents decided to share the information instead. The information got back to the cartel. Then in March 2011, over 300 people were rounded up, most of them killed, burned alive in a massive fire on a ranch outside of town. The homes of about 80 families were looted, burned and bulldozed to the ground. The firefighters were told to stay away or be killed. The police and civil officials did nothing. There was no help for anyone. Some of the victims include a 15 year old boy who was out with friends. His friends and their entire family were rounded up and killed along with the boy. This story hit me hard as the mother of a teenage son myself. He was an ordinary boy with a loving family. He died in fear. His mother has been left broken.
There was a man who was searching for family members. He left behind a beloved wife, a daughter and an unknown son. The family who owned the ranch were nearly decimated. A 5 year old girl and 3 year old boy were spared but they lost their baby brother, parents, grandparents and an 80+ year old great grandmother. I think this story hit me the hardest because the girl, now 12, still blames herself for her baby brother's death. She argued with the men saying she could care for him but they said no. She still thinks she could have saved him.
In so many cases, the victims were completely innocent. Yet the authorities were ready to call them all cartel members making money from drug smuggling. That may be what hurts the most, to have the victims' integrity expunged to make a convenient narrative for the authorities. As well, it took 6 years for a proper investigation to be carried out. The result of which were death certificates for the missing dead and a box of earth because they couldn't trace the small amount of body parts remaining in the ashes at the ranch. The families do not feel any sense of closure or safety. Yes, the cartel brothers have been arrested and imprisoned for drugs crimes, but there is fear that they still run things from prison. Yes, some low level people were arrested for the massacre but there is no discussion on how the cartel got the leaked information from the DEA. The DEA still see it as casualties as a part of a war on drugs and do not accept any blame. The whole pathetic incident is mired in corruption from the Mexican side and bad management from the American side. The victims remain without justice and their families continue to grieve.
I did not intend to write so much but this story has touched me for some reason. Maybe it's the senselessness of it all. That poor girl pleading for the life of her baby brother sums it up. It was inhuman and beyond the pale.