"jmulligan13" for Borderland Beat; AP and CPJ
YouTuber 'Nana Pelucas' |
MEXICO CITY —
Prosecutors in southern Mexico said Tuesday they have arrested an alleged
lieutenant of a drug gang for the 2018 murder of a YouTube commentator in
Acapulco. The Guerrero state prosecutors office said the suspect had once been
the second in command of the Independent Cartel of Acapulco.
The office identified the man only by his first names, Edgar Saúl, in
keeping with anti-incrimination rules. The victim, Leslie Ann Pamela
Montenegro, was known by her YouTube persona as “Nana Pelucas.”
Before her death, she had been threatened by a drug gang over her
YouTube channel and its commentary on local events in the resort city. She was
shot to death by men who walked into a restaurant she ran near Acapulco’s
tourist zone. Montenegro used a big wig and glasses to deliver chatty, comic
commentary and criticisms, some concerning the local government.
Background from Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
Two unidentified assailants on February 5, 2018 shot dead Pamela
Montenegro, a journalist, satirist and social media commentator who was also
known as Pamika, in the beachside resort city of Acapulco, according to news
reports.
The attack took place between 6 p.m. and 7 p.m. in A Todos los Santos, a
restaurant that Montenegro owned with her husband. According to a statement
given that same day by Roberto Álvarez Heredia, a spokesperson for the Guerrero
state attorney general’s office, two unidentified attackers entered the
restaurant and immediately approached Montenegro, who was sitting with her
husband. The assailants fired at least two shots at Montenegro’s face and
abdomen, before fleeing, according to the statement and initial police report
to which CPJ had access. The report did not say whether the attackers said
anything to Montenegro before shooting.
The 36-year-old journalist ran a satirical YouTube channel and an online
news magazine called El Sillón, which she founded in 2012. She was more widely
known as "La Nana Pelucas" (The Grandma in Wigs), her online persona
featured on her satirical YouTube channel, El Sillón TV. Both as editor of El
Sillón and as "La Nana Pelucas," Montenegro covered local politics in
Acapulco and the Guerrero region, and frequently mocked local politicians. El
Sillón‘s Facebook page, which Montenegro administered with her husband, Samuel
Muñuzuri, featured a variety of posts in the months before her death, including
on topics such as beauty, culture, and politics.
According to a February 6, 2018 statement from the Guerrero state
attorney general Javier Olea, Montenegro had received threats in the months
before her murder. He said that her publications had put her “in the view” of a
local official. The statement did not specify the name of the official or which
of Montenegro’s publications it was referring to. Olea did not elaborate on the
nature of the threats Montenegro received.
CPJ was unable to find any recent stories on El Sillón, Montenegro’s El
Sillón Facebook page or videos on her YouTube channel that met Olea’s
description. Her recent publications on El Sillón’s Facebook page included
several critical posts about Acapulco mayor Evodio Velázquez and posts in
support of candidates running for office in the July 2018 elections, but no
reports on organized crime in Acapulco or its surrounding area.
Several phone calls by CPJ in February, March, and April to the office
of Velázquez remained unanswered.
Olea said that that Javi Daniel Cervantes Magno, the alleged leader of a
local criminal gang that is active in Acapulco, ordered Montenegro’s murder,
according to the February 6 statement. A spokesperson for the state attorney
general’s office told CPJ on February 8 that he was unable to confirm that a
warrant had been issued for Magno’s arrest and did not return calls requesting
further comment.
CPJ could not locate Cervantes Magno for comment.
José Antonio Rivera, a journalist from the region, told CPJ in a
telephone conversation on February 7, 2018, that Montenegro “was well known for
being very critical of local politicians.” Rivera added that she had “a very
sharp tongue.”
Montenegro and her husband, Samuel Muñuzuri, had been threatened
previously by criminal gangs. On December 4, 2016, a series of “narcomantas,”
(banners carrying messages attributed to organized crime) were placed around
Acapulco, containing threats aimed at several people, including Montenegro and
Muñuzuri, a multimedia producer, according to news reports.
The banners mentioned a Facebook page named “Denuncias Acapulco Sin
Sencura,” on which citizens could report crime, violence, corruption, and abuse
of power by the authorities. The banner claimed Montenegro was one of the
page’s administrators. In his February 6 statement to local media, Guerrero
state attorney general Javier Olea confirmed that Montenegro ran the Facebook
page, which last ran posts in October 2017.
Miguel Ángel Mata Mata, the president of the Journalists’ Club of
Guerrero, criticized Olea’s statement. "I think those comments were
rushed," he told CPJ, although he did not elaborate on why he believed the
comments were rushed.
Ricardo Sánchez Pérez del Pozo, who heads the office of the Federal
Special Prosecutor for Attention to Crimes Committed against Freedom of
Expression (FEADLE) told CPJ that his office, as of February 7, 2018, had not
yet opened a federal investigation into the killing.
On August 28, 2018, local media in Acapulco reported that a suspect in the murder of Montenegro has been arrested one day earlier in a hotel located on the city’s coastal boulevard. According to the reports, citing unspecified law enforcement sources, the suspect was nicknamed “El Rusito” (“The Little Russian”) and has been involved in a series of violent crimes in the city. No official statement on the arrest has been released. CPJ called the state attorney general’s office for comment in early December 2018 and left a message, but did not receive a response.
YouTube channel:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/c/ElSillonTeVe/videos
Someone needs to translate all of it
DeleteMx...here is my original article about her and the killing..
ReplyDeletehttp://www.borderlandbeat.com/2018/02/they-assassinate-la-nana-pelucas.html
It should've been you @chivis. And not nana pelucas.
Delete@1253 The honest truth is it should’ve been you an obvious scumbag POS Who provides no meaningful contribution to society. While the lady you denigrate provides a positive contribution to society for thousands of readers. You are a waste of space and a waste of good air that you’re breathing… I’m sure many of the other Raiders support my opinion that you should take your worthless, mean-spirited, hateful comments elsewhere
DeleteWTF 12:53
Deletewhat a HORRIABLE thing to say !
wow your a evil prick
you better take those words back Karmas a Bitch
there is no humor in that comment. if you are serious just remember the FBI follows this blog.
DeleteMayor's in office work together with the local cartel, glad this one exposed, to the everyday curruption, that goes in Mexico.
ReplyDeleteAll these significant arrests lately are admirable. AMLO must have run out of hugs...
ReplyDeleteI was in Acapulco when this happened, not far from my hotel
ReplyDeleteI live a block away from where it happened.
DeleteThat's what happens when you flash $ in Mexico.
ReplyDelete