Mexican officials arrested five people in connection to the recent kidnapping and murder of Americans near the U.S.–Mexico border, according to the attorney general for the Mexican state of Tamaulipas.
A Mexican woman and two Americans, Shaeed Woodard and Zindell Brown, were killed when someone opened fire on Woodard, Brown, and two other Americans after they arrived in Matamoros, located just south of the border from Brownsville, Texas, according to officials. The bodies of the two dead Americans were repatriated to the United States on March 9, officials said.
Tamaulipas Gov. Americo Villarreal previously said in a news conference that a woman and a man had survived the incident. They were identified as Eric Williams and LaTavia Washington McGee. The four U.S. citizens reportedly had traveled from the Carolinas to Mexico to receive cosmetic surgery.
Photos published online also appeared to show the five cartel members who were handed over to Mexican authorities. The Epoch Times couldn’t confirm the authenticity of the apology, the letter, or the photos.
Details
On March 3, after the four Americans crossed the southern border and entered downtown Matamoros, they came under gunfire and were then loaded into a pickup truck. The slain Mexican woman, identified as 33-year-old Areli Pablo Servando, was apparently killed by a stray bullet.Another friend, who remained in Brownsville, called police after being unable to reach the group that crossed the border on March 3.
Brownsville Police Department spokesman Martin Sandoval said on March 9 that officers followed protocol by checking local hospitals and jails after receiving the report about the missing people. A detective was assigned to the case within the hour and then alerted the FBI after realizing the people had crossed into Mexico. The FBI took over the case as videos showing the Matamoros shootout, with the victims matching the description of the missing people, began to circulate on social media.
The surviving Americans told investigators they were taken to a clinic in an ambulance to receive first aid, a statement said. By reviewing police surveillance video around the city, authorities were able to identify the ambulance and find the clinic. No arrests were made at the clinic, according to the statement.
“If you’re driving there, which most people will from Arizona, stay on the main highways. Try not to veer too far off course. That’s where you can kind of get into sticky situations,” FBI Phoenix spokeswoman Brooke Brennan told Fox-10. “Have an emergency contact, make sure you’re checking in with them, and make sure they know how often you plan to check in with them.”