Anabel Flores Salazar, a 32-year-old journalist from Veracruz state in Mexico, was found dead on February 9, 2016, along a highway in neighboring Puebla state. The coroner determined that she had been suffocated to death. Early morning on February 8, 2016, a group of armed men entered Flores Salazar’s house and abducted her. The Veracruz authorities have stated that they are investigating the case. On February 13, 2016, Veracruz’s governor Javier Duarte de Ochoa linked an already detained drug cartel member with Flores Salazar’s murder. In May 2016, one suspect was detained and in August 2016 a second was arrested on suspicion of being the mastermind behind the murder.
Case History
Anabel Flores Salazar was a reporter for El Sol de Orizaba and covered crime, police activity, murders, and car accidents in Veracruz. It is reported that she had recently published an article on the case of a store owner who had been shot dead. Flores Salazar was also investigating the mysterious deaths of teenage girls in Veracruz. She had previously worked as a contributor for dailies El Mundo de Orizaba and El Buen Tono, whose offices had been attacked by a group of unidentified gunmen earlier in 2011.
On February 8, following her abduction, Governor Duarte issued a tweet stating that the authorities were following her case closely, and on the same day, the state prosecutor’s office released a statement claiming Flores Salazar had links to an alleged member of an organized crime group. The member, Victor Osorio Santacruz, known as El Pantera, had been present at the same restaurant as Flores Salazar when he was arrested, according to Flores Salazar’s family.
The state authorities opened an investigation into Flores Salazar’s murder, and on February 13, 2016, Governor Duarte linked Flores Salazar’s murder and the 2011 attack on El Buen Tono to Josele Márquez Balderas (alias “El Chichi”) of the Los Zetas organized crime group. Márquez Balderas, detained on February 2, 2016, six days before Flores Salazar’s murder, is thought to have orchestrated her murder from behind bars. The government insists that organized crime remains the biggest enemy of the press in the state.