Federico Tobares, missing since 2013 |
The first Friday of this month marked the seventh
anniversary of Federico Tobares's disappearance. He was an Argentine national who
moved to Mexico in 2009 to pursuit a career as a chef specialized in
Mexican cuisine. No traces of Tobares have ever been found since he went
missing on 5 June 2013, but investigators believe he was kidnapped by the
Jalisco New Generation Cartel (CJNG).
When he arrived in Mexico, Tobares worked for two
restaurants owned by Gerardo González Valencia, a member of Los Cuinis clan, a
branch of the CJNG. The motives behind his disappearance are not clearly
established, but investigators believe he was kidnapped by the CJNG after
Tobares saw something suspicious at his workplace.
In this report, Borderland Beat will cover the mysterious
case surrounding Tobares's disappearance and will include details on his early life and background, his time in Mexico, and how the CJNG ended the
promising career of an aspiring international chef.
Early life and career
Carlos Federico Tobares was born in Gualeguaychú,
Entre Ríos, Argentina, on 23 February 1976. Among his circle of friends
and family members he was nicknamed "Fede" (short for Federico) and
"Gordo" (Fatty). According to his friends, Tobares enjoyed
travelling, going to the beach, and was a fan of soccer team River Plate.
In 2009, he decided to leave Argentina and move to
Mexico after he found a job as a chef in the resort city of Puerto Vallarta,
Jalisco. Tobares was particularly fond of Mexican cuisine.
In Jalisco, he worked as the main chef of Hotelito
Desconocido, a luxurious boutique hotel in Tomatlán. He also worked at Nudoki
Sushi Bar, an Asian restaurant in Puerto Vallarta. These two restaurants
were owned by Gerardo González Valencia, a high-ranking leader of Los Cuinis, a
branch of the CJNG.
Hotelito Desconocido, the boutique hotel owned by the CJNG where Tobares worked |
Tobares first worked at Hotelito Desconocido, but González Valencia invited him to join Nudoki Sushi Bar, arguing he did not know about cuisine and that he would let him run the business. González Valencia reportedly offered to make Tobares his business partner.
Passport picture of Gerardo Gonzalez Valencia with his alias (source: Teledoce) |
Disappearance
The last known contact with Tobares was at 12:32 p.m.
on 5 June 2013, the day he disappeared, when he spoke to Verónica Román, a
friend from Argentina.
While on the phone, Tobares explained that he was
doing González Valencia a favor by driving a vehicle from Puerto Vallarta
to Guadalajara and exchanging it for another of his boss' preference. He told
Verónica that they were guiding him along the way, but said he did not know
where he was, that he was scared, and that the whole situation seemed strange
to him. That was the last thing Tobares said to Verónica.
Investigation
Investigators discovered that Tobares left Puerto
Vallarta at 3 am, and at 8 a.m. he met a man named Rogelio ("Rocky")
in Guadalajara. After that he met with a González Valencia at a tobacco
shop to discuss plans for the González Valencia's daughter's birthday party.
Tobares was there until about 12 noon when the store security camera recorded
him leaving. About half an hour later he made the phone call to Verónica, from
a location which investigators have not revealed to the public.
On 19 June, police officers discovered the vehicle
that Tobares had been driving abandoned in La Piedad, Michoacán, a city 165
kilometres (103 mi) east of Guadalajara and close to the border with the states
of Jalisco and Guanajuato.
Authorities found Tobares' vehicle in Michoacan, but no traces of him were found |
As the vehicle was found in Michoacán, state
authorities there began to work with Jalisco officials to try to locate
Tobares. The vehicle was kept in Michoacán.
On social media, Tobares' friends posted the pictures
of the vehicle, a 2009 Dodge Caliber with San Luis Potosí state license plates.
They stated that the vehicle was owned by González Valencia, who was also the
owner of the restaurant where Tobares worked.
Tobares was quite active on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and
YouTube, and posted pictures and videos of his personal and work life on social
media including trips to Jalisco, Michoacán, Guanajuato, Nayarit, Guerrero,
Mexico City, and Teotihuacán. His pictures showed his work in hotels, upscale
restaurants and yachts, and private parties.
In 2011, Tobares posted a photo on his Facebook of a
man washing the dishes with him in a restaurant's kitchen. The man was
displaying a Colt Gold Cup .45 pistol tucked behind his pants. Several of his
friends commented on the picture, and one advised him to be careful.
Leads and possible motives
Investigators in Mexico and Argentina discarded two
leads that were initially thought plausible.
They do not believe that Tobares purposely decided to
cut ties with his family and friends to disappear of his own free will. Tobares
was looking for a new job in Guadalajara and had his passport and other legal
documents ready, which made investigators think that it was unlikely that
Tobares would go into hiding or cut communication with those close to him.
The other lead that was discarded was one that
suggested that Tobares was kidnapped for ransom, mainly because his possible
abductors have not reached out to his family for a payment. Investigators
monitored Tobares' bank accounts to see if they were used after he went
missing.
Some of his friends stated that Tobares had an interview lined up in Guadalajara, but it is not known with who |
His family stated that Tobares' enthusiasm for work
went down a few months before he disappeared. He told his sister that he was
scared, and one time he called her sobbing. In March 2013, he spoke to his
sister and told her that he wanted to return to Argentina.
CJNG's involvement
Investigators believe that Tobares was probably hired
as a cook by a drug lord for a party or event, without him knowing who he was
cooking for. At some point, investigators suspect, Tobares might have seen
something suspicious that put him in danger, or might have had a problem with
someone at those private events. In addition, investigators also theorized that
rival gang members could have kidnapped Tobares to send a message to his
employers, as part of a gang retaliation.
Tobares worked at Hotelito Desconocido and Nudoki
Sushi Bar, but he was also a hired chef for private parties; his family told
investigators that Tobares was sometimes taken by the CJNG, Tobares' last
employer, to their private islands in western Mexico to cook for their
exclusive events. He was not allowed to leave for a few days and was prohibited
from using his cellphone while he was there.
His family believes that at one of those private
parties, Tobares saw something suspicious and began asking some people to
clarify what he saw. When the CJNG found out what he was doing, González
Valencia reportedly threatened him and told him to ask those question
face-to-face. A week before his disappearance, González
Valencia reportedly ordered Tobares to close down the sushi restaurant and
fire all of the employees.
Case developments
On 21 June, Tobares' sister Ana Soledad traveled to
Mexico to help investigators locate her brother. She told the press she was
working with Argentine ambassador Diego Alonso Garcés and the Mexican Federal
Police on the case. On 23 June, the family asked the Mexican National Human
Rights Commission (CNDH) to carry out a "parallel" investigation.
Tobares' family and friends have used social media to bring attention to his case |
The family also complained that they had encountered
problems in Mexico when the Argentine consular authorities were rotated and new
personnel took over the case years later.
Aftermath
On 19 August 2015, the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets
Control sanctioned 15 Mexican businesses, including Hotelito Desconocido, under
the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act (Kingpin Act).
According to the sanction, Hotelito Desconocido served
as a money laundering front that provided financial and material assistance to
Los Cuinis and their leader Abigael González Valencia (brother of Tobares' last
employer). All of Hotelito Desconocido's assets in the U.S. were frozen, and
U.S. citizens were prohibited from doing business with it.
Hotelito Desconocido was sanctioned along with several other CJNG-owned firms |
On 21 April 2016, Tobares' former employer Gerardo
González Valencia was arrested by the National Police of Uruguay in Montevideo,
Uruguay. He was captured following an extensive money laundering investigation
between Latin American officials and the U.S. government that linked him to
several shell companies he used to purchase assets in the Americas and
overseas.
In an effort to continue their search, Tobares' family
tried to increase their activity on social media, but they said that some
people (who they suspect worked for González Valencia) told them that Tobares
was with them or that they had seen him alive in Mexico. Tobares' sister said
she was told that González Valencia was once in Argentina and wanted to
speak to her, but she refused.
"We just want to know where he is so we can bring
him home, with his people, with his friends he loved and loved him. We do not
want to know who took him. We just want to know, even anonymously, where he is,"
she said.
González Valencia was extradited to the U.S. from
Uruguay last month, as reported by Borderland Beat. But few remembered Tobares,
the first Argentine to disappear in Mexico.
Note: This article includes excerpts from the Wikipedia page titled "Disappearance of Federico Tobares", which was published by Borderland Beat reporter "MX" in April 2017. Over 50 sources were used for this report.
This was a fascinating story and great read, thank you! This was the same hotel that Sandra Bullock frequented, which was a minor story back in 2015, when it was sanctioned.
ReplyDeleteYou're very welcome, J. Very nice of you.
DeleteI had no idea about Sandra Bullock visiting there.
Many other international celebrities stayed there but Hotelito Desconocido's staff and management had a very restrict privacy policy. Around 65% of the clientele was from the U.S. and 25% was from Europe.
"But few remembered Tobares, the first Argentine to disappear in Mexico."
ReplyDeleteIs this guy really the first Argentine person to disappear in Mexico? That seems crazy to me and if true, it should have gotten way more media coverage....
Based on the sources provided at the time, yes:
Delete"se refiere al caso como el del primer levantado —que en el argot propio del narco en México significa secuestro— argentino"
https://elpais.com/internacional/2013/06/20/actualidad/1371755463_722316.html
"Federico Tobares, el primer argentino desaparecido en México, se trasladaba el 5 de junio desde Puerto Vallarta a Guadalajara para una entrevista de trabajo."
https://sipse.com/mexico/no-puede-ser-que-nadie-sepa-nada-de-mi-hermano-37977.html
There was an Argentine lady named María Luz Foguet who was missing in Veracruz in 2011. However, she returned home safely after a few days.