43 Missing Mexican Students: [DETAILS] Iguala Mayor And His Wife Are Mastermind. Why Will They Do Such Brutal Crime?

43 missing Mexican students could be the remains found recently by Mexican authorities. The remains were shot before they were burned. Although the remains are hard to be identified, investigators are looking on the possibility that those are the bodies of the 43 missing Mexican students.

 Without formal conclusive investigations, Attorney General Jesús Murillo Karam stated in the news conference on Nov. 7 that the remains found were more likely the bodies of the 43 missing Mexican students.

He formed an analysis right after the members of the Guerreros Unidos cartel confessed how they executed the brutal killing. Taken in video clips, Murillo Karam presented how the suspects detailed the merciless killing where students were abducted, killed and burned.

Given the fact that the bodies were burned while some of the ashes were thrown into the river, Murillo Karam admitted that identifying the remains through DNA would be impossible.

Murillo Karam was carried away as he laid down the full details on what has transpired since the Sept. 26 attack in Iguala, Southern part of Guerrero. He also mentioned that the prisoners claimed that a number of policemen and drug syndicate were involved in the brutal fate of the 43 missing Mexican students.

"I know the huge pain that the information we have obtained causes the family members," Murillo claimed. "This is something that should never have happened, and must never be repeated."

USA Today reports that the burned students were handed down by some policemen to the drug syndicate. The brutal murder of the 43 missing Mexicans students lasted for two days.

Iguala Mayor José Luis Abarca and his wife, María de los ángeles Pineda were arrested together, whom the suspects claimed to be their "mastermind." 74 suspects involved in the brutal death of the students were also seized.

The update on the case of the 43 missing Mexicans students has stirred more concern for thousands of protesters which mostly are students and concerned citizens.

The attack happened on the day when the Mexican students apparently went to Iguala to protest for insufficient funding allotted to their school. The college students are mostly in their 20s and are studying Education in Ayotzinapa College.

Since then, there were no reports or update that pertains to the return of the 43 missing Mexican students.

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