{"id":50812,"date":"2018-08-21T18:51:15","date_gmt":"2018-08-21T18:51:15","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.buzzfeed.com\/karlazabludovsky\/vanishing-mexican-lawyers-are-leaving-fear-and-questions-beh"},"modified":"2018-08-21T18:51:15","modified_gmt":"2018-08-21T18:51:15","slug":"vanishing-mexican-lawyers-are-leaving-fear-and-questions-behind","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/effectsofanxiety.net\/archives\/50812","title":{"rendered":"Vanishing Mexican Lawyers Are Leaving Fear And Questions Behind"},"content":{"rendered":"
\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\tMore than 60 lawyers disappeared or were killed during a wave of violence in Durango.<\/b> Their families mourn them and hope for justice while their colleagues scurry away from certain criminal cases.\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t\t<\/p>\n DURANGO, Mexico — When Claudio Hugo Gallardo disappeared in 2013, his sons scoured the local hospital, prison, and morgue frantically. They combed through video footage recovered from Gallardo’s last known location and even inquired with the cartels whether their operatives had picked up the well-known lawyer.<\/p>\n But before Gallardo’s family could find him, they stopped looking.<\/p>\n “It’s for our own peace. We don’t want threats,” said Claudio Gallardo, one of the attorney’s sons. The family has floated several theories, including the involvement of government officials, cartel thugs, and a combination of both, but prefer to be discreet about their findings, citing orders by local authorities to stop prodding.<\/p>\n Gallardo is one of more than 60 lawyers killed or disappeared here during a spate of crimes against litigators that began in 2008, according to members of Durango’s Benito Juárez Bar Association. Some of the bodies that have been recovered carried messages from criminal groups saying the litigator should not have been defending certain clients, said Celina López Carrera, who is in charge of the state’s public prosecutors.<\/p>\n The Durango attorney general’s office opened a specialized unit to investigate crimes against lawyers in 2010. The unit’s head, Orieta Valles, said none of the 14 cases assigned to it have been solved.<\/p>\n Lawyers in Durango operate in one of the most hostile environments in the country, in the heart of Mexico’s Golden Triangle — the marijuana and poppy-growing region straddling Durango, Sinaloa, and Chihuahua states. For as long as local residents can remember, Durango has lived under the grip of the powerful Sinaloa cartel, led until recently by Joaquín Guzmán Loera, known as “El Chapo,” Mexico’s most wanted drug kingpin. Guzmán was arrested last year, more than a decade after escaping from a high-security prison.<\/p>\n The area was especially battered by violence after former President Felipe Calderón launched his war on organized crime in 2006, fracturing the large, traditional syndicates into smaller, more volatile ones. By 2010, the three states forming the triangle placed in the top five most violent in the country, according to a study on criminal trends by M\u00e9xico Evalúa, a public policy research group.<\/p>\n A semblance of calm has since returned to the city, 194 miles northeast of Mazatlán, a popular destination for U.S. and Canadian retirees, with the homicide rate on the decline. But the repercussions of years of drug-war-related terror are evident, having transformed not only the lives of litigators’ relatives but also the willingness of lawyers to take on certain cases.<\/p>\n What happens when people go missing and those left behind do not have the minimum measure of protection to speak up and demand an investigation? And what happens when the missing are the very people tasked with upholding justice?<\/p>\n