43 Abducted Students Were Murdered and Burned.

On September 26 in the city of Iguala, Mexico, Police attacked
protesting students; killing 6people and abducting 43 students.

Now, reports coming out show that these students were murdered and
their bodies burned.

According to Nydaily:
Forty-three missing college students are believed to have been
murdered and burned near a municipal garbage dump in the southern
state of Guerrero and their remains thrown into a river, Mexico's
chief prosecutor said Friday.

In a somber, lengthy explanation of the investigation, Attorney
General Jesus Murillo Karam played video showing hundreds of charred
fragments of bone and teeth fished from the river and its banks. He
said it will be very difficult to extract DNA to confirm identities of
the victims of a horrific mass murder and incineration that lasted 14
hours.

"I know the enormous pain the information we've obtained causes the
family members, a pain we all share," Murillo Karam said at a news
conference. "The statements and information that we have gotten
unfortunately points to the murder of a large number of people in the
municipality of Cocula."

"International experts have said they can't give a time frame for when
they will get results," he added.

Murillo Karam showed videotaped confessions by those (drug gang?) who
allegedly killed the students and built an enormous funeral pyre of
tires, wood and fuel along the River San Juan in Cocula, a town near
Iguala.

He also confirmed that human remains found in clandestine graves
discovered after the students went missing did not include any of the
43 young men. Those graves held women and men believed to have been
killed in August, he said.


Parents and family members don't believe the government and believe
they are alive.

(http://m.nydailynews.com/news/world/missing-mexican-students-dead-remains-burned-top-prosecuto-article-1.2003324)

Police actually abduct students, who are later found dead? Is this a
ritual? What sort of lawlessness is this?

Photo: Mexican Attorney General
Photo-credit: nydaily news