Current:Home > ScamsMexican photojournalist found shot to death in his car in Ciudad Juarez near U.S. border -Wealth Momentum Network
Mexican photojournalist found shot to death in his car in Ciudad Juarez near U.S. border
View
Date:2025-04-18 05:15:27
A photographer for a newspaper in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez, which has been dominated by drug cartels, was found shot to death, prosecutors said Thursday.
The body of news photographer Ismael Villagómez was found in the driver's seat of a car Thursday in Ciudad Juarez, a violence-plagued city across the border from El Paso, Texas.
Villagómez's newspaper, the Heraldo de Juarez, said he was found dead in a car that he had registered to use for work for a ride-hailing app. Given low salaries, it is not uncommon for journalists in Mexico to hold down more than one job. The newspaper said his phone was not found at the scene.
In a tweet, press freedom organization Article 19 said Villagómez was found murdered in the car at about 1:30 a.m. on Thursday.
📢ARTICLE 19 documenta el asesinato de Ismael Villagómez Tapia, fotoperiodista para el @heraldodejuarez.
— ARTICLE 19 MX-CA (@article19mex) November 16, 2023
Según información pública, fue asesinado con arma de fuego por un sujeto desconocido alrededor de la 1:30 am, a bordo de su automóvil.
🧵 pic.twitter.com/aqOd71zYWK
Ciudad Juarez has been dominated by drug cartels and their turf battles for almost two decades, and gangs often object to photos of their victims or their activities being published.
Last year in Ciudad Juarez, two prison inmates were shot dead and 20 were injured in a riot involving two rival gangs. Local media said both groups were linked to the Sinaloa cartel, whose former leader, Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman, is serving a life sentence in the United States.
Carlos Manuel Salas, a prosecutor for the northern border state of Chihuahua, said authorities are investigating whether Villagómez had a fare at the time, or whether the killing was related to his work as a photographer.
The Committee to Protect Journalists made an urgent call for authorities to investigate the killing.
His death was the fifth instance of a journalist being killed in Mexico so far in 2023.
In September, Jesús Gutiérrez, a journalist who ran a community Facebook news page, was killed in the northern Mexico border town of San Luis Rio Colorado when he was apparently caught in the crossfire of an attack aimed at police.
Prosecutors in the northern border state of Sonora said Gutiérrez was talking with the police officers, who were his neighbors, when they were hit by a hail of gunfire, killing one policeman and wounding the other three. They said Gutiérrez's death was "collateral" to the attack on the police.
In May, a journalist who was also a former local official was shot dead in the country's central Puebla region. Marco Aurelio Ramirez, 69, was killed in broad daylight as he left his home in the town of Tehuacan. He had worked for decades for several different media outlets.
At least two other journalists have been killed so far this year in Mexico, which has become one of the deadliest places in the world for journalists outside a war zone.
In the past five years alone, the Committee to Protect Journalists documented the killings of at least 52 journalists in Mexico.
Last year was the deadliest in recent memory for Mexican journalists, with 15 killed. That year, Mexico was one of the deadliest places for journalists, second only to Ukraine.
At least three of those journalists were murdered in direct retaliation for their reporting on crime and political corruption, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Villagómez's death came on the same day that the Committee to Protect Journalists presented its 2023 International Press Freedom Award to Mexican journalist María Teresa Montaño.
In 2021, three unidentified men abducted and threatened to kill Montaño, then a freelance investigative reporter, as she attempted to board a public bus. Montaño told the group that she had been working on a corruption investigation involving state officials, and the men who kidnapped her stole notes and files concerning the investigation.
"Honoring Montaño with this year's IPFA is a powerful recognition of independent regional journalism in Mexico, where reporters often face extreme violence committed with impunity," the group said.
- In:
- Mexico
- Cartel
veryGood! (4634)
Related
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Trump defends controversial comments about immigrants poisoning the nation’s blood at Iowa rally
- Stock market today: World shares advance after Wall Street ticks higher amid rate-cut hopes
- DNA may link Philadelphia man accused of slashing people on trail to a cold-case killing, police say
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Missouri Supreme Court strikes down law against homelessness, COVID vaccine mandates
- Rite Aid banned from using facial recognition technology in stores for five years
- Abuse in the machine: Study shows AI image-generators being trained on explicit photos of children
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Firefighters are battling a wildfire on the slopes of a mountain near Cape Town in South Africa
Ranking
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- The 15 most valuable old toys that you might have in your attic (but probably don’t)
- This AI code that detects when guns, threats appear on school cameras is available for free
- Travis Kelce Reacts to Amazing Taylor Swift's Appearance at Chiefs vs. Patriots Game
- Trump's 'stop
- Colorado Supreme Court rules Trump is disqualified from presidency for Jan. 6 riot
- Artists, books, films that will become free to use in 2024: Disney, Picasso, Tolkien
- Paige DeSorbo & Hannah Berner New Year Eve's Fashion Guide to Bring That Main Character Energy in 2024
Recommendation
Sam Taylor
'Aquaman' star Jason Momoa cracks up Kelly Clarkson with his NSFW hip thrusts: Watch
Dancing in her best dresses, fearless, a TikTok performer recreates the whole Eras Tour
Nature groups go to court in Greece over a strategic gas terminal backed by the European Union
Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
No fire plans, keys left out and no clean laundry. Troubled South Carolina jail fails inspection
Shark attacks woman walking in knee-deep water after midnight in New Zealand
China showed greater willingness to influence U.S. midterm elections in 2022, intel assessment says