We are learning as something new that three young Mennonites have raped, in the colonies of Belice and Piedras Dos, about twenty girls, Mennonites too. It is said that, to commit these sexual outrages, criminals use a numbing spray that they spread in the rooms of adolescent girls at night.
Well, in 2011, more than a decade ago, my impression of something similar was so great that I dedicated myself to investigating the case of the rapes, visiting Manitoba, Chihuahua, and other Mennonite colonies; attending some of the hearings of the predators and the raped women in the Palace of Justice, supported by the help of the prosecutor Freddy Pérez, who also provided me with the files of the trial, with the statements of those who attributed everything to a punishment by the Devil. From there came my extensive novel entitled “The rapists of the dream”, published by La Hoguera the following year.
In this case from Manitoba, it was about seven Mennonites, between the ages of 17 and 40, who subjected more than a hundred girls, boys, boys, and their fathers and mothers. The Criminals used, for their misdeeds, a spray based on scopolamine or burundanga that is extracted from solanaceous plants such as the legendary belladonna or the mysterious mandrake, which takes us back to medieval times or earlier.
This spray, spread in a room, causes those who receive it to be victims of a depressive sedative of the nervous system, that is, in good words, that the individual is left without will, as well as amnesiac. What better way to sexually abuse? Rapists in Manitoba poured scopolamine through girls’ windows, which were left open by the heat, and had between 20 minutes and half an hour for their nefarious purposes.
The seven rapists acquired the spray from a city Mennonite, who, in addition, provided them with viagra, yumbina, condoms and even alcohol, so that the madmen would have the courage and vigor to possess as many people as possible, without paying much attention to sex or age, although the preference was for young girls, who, by taking away their virginity, disqualified them from marriage, an essential condition in that community of good, honest and hard-working people, whose evil lies in their archaic traditions that are sacredly respect. The madmen were sentenced to long prison sentences in Palmasola, which, knowing our justice, we do not know if they have been served. Now, the terror has returned in the colonies