'Lady Iguala' identified as prime suspect in case of 43 missing students
Update October 22, 2014 9:47pm ET: In a press conference, Mexico Attorney General Jesus Murillo Karam links the disappeared students to Iguala Mayor Jose Luis Abarca Velazquez and his wife Maria de los Angeles Abarca Velazquez. This is a developing story.
When news broke in Mexico about the 43 missing college students in the municipality of Iguala, Governor Angel Aguirre got a phone call from a high-ranking administration office. “Your head is on the line here,” the voice on the other end of the line warned. The governor was then instructed to apprehend the Iguala police chief and keep a close eye on the mayor. “I have it under control,” Gov Aguirre replied.
That’s before they skipped town. Mayor Jose Luis Abarca Velazquez and Police Chief Felipe Flores Velazquez are now nowhere to be found. The federal government has now taken over administration of the municipality; 26 local cops have been arrested along with four alleged members of the criminal organization Guerreros Unidos. The families of the victims eagerly await the DNA test results of the bodies found in mass graves.
The initial federal probes, which I have been able to access, point to the mayor’s wife for allegedly playing a major role in the criminal case. According to high-ranking officials, Maria de los Angeles Pineda, now dubbed by the media as “Lady Iguala,” was the one who ran the town — the true power behind her husband’s political office. Before becoming a fugitive, Pineda was the president of the municipal DIF, a government social welfare institution.