they were not together
All the students who were traveling on bus 1531 disappeared on the night of September 26 and although the so-called “historical truth” stated that they were executed and burned in the Cocula garbage dump and their remains scattered in the San Juan River, in reality, the normalistas were not together after being captured.
According to the Report, a group of students was secured by the Iguala police and taken to Loma Coyotes, while another group was secured by the Huitzuco police and transferred to that municipality.
The students from truck 1568 were abducted from the Iguala police station by municipal police officers from Iguala and Cocula. They were later handed over to members of Guerreros Unidos.
The initial instruction was to “burn them all together”, but since there were many, they decided to divide them, according to the report.
Through the analysis of the communications made on September 26 and 27, 2014, which included 206,000 records and 116 numbers, it was found that “at no time did the normalistas establish communication with any element of public security or with numbers identified with members of Guerreros Unidos, and that there is no technical evidence, based on the information available, that support that the students were together at some point”.
Torture
A report by the Interdisciplinary Group of Experts and Independent Experts (GIEI) determined that 77% of 80 people who had been detained presented some type of torture. “In the investigations of the Ayotzinapa Case, a convenient narrative was generated based on the statements obtained through torture from those allegedly responsible for the disappearance of the students, where the victims -the students-, were re-victimized and stigmatized,” says the report.
The document indicates that the interrogations were carried out through torture, at least of “El Chereje” and “El Pato”. Likewise, in the chronology, it is also mentioned that Julio César Mondragón was one of the students who ran to take refuge after an attack at a press conference, and one of his classmates heard his submission. “His body was found the next morning in the Industrial City, near the C-4 facilities, with obvious signs of torture,” the document details.
With the new information, the hitman Eduardo N, alias “El Chucky”, was identified as the one who killed and tortured the student Julio César Mondragón, “even without having instructions from his superiors.”
Student Cell Phones
The young people were stripped of their cell phones, so that was not a tool that contributed to finding their whereabouts. His communication devices were even used days later with another chip, such as Julio César Mondragón’s, which continued to be used after September 30, 2014.
Among the reports that SEIDO had not shared, it was found that the team presented activity with another number, with which communications were identified from a member of Guerrero Unidos, Gabriel N “la Gaby” with a soldier on October 6 and 15, 2014.