‘Cartel crematorium’ with oven used to torch bodies discovered by horrified mums

A makeshift crematorium used to burn up human remains has been uncovered by a group of horrified mums who said it was "still hot."

Authorities were immediately alerted to the makeshift crematorium with police officers arriving to take photos and record the horror scene. The Searching Mothers Collective of Jalisco made the horror find on October 10.

One member of the group said: "It is basically a cemetery, and we cannot imagine the magnitude of how many bodies could have been burned here, as charred bones were scattered everywhere."

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Human remains were found at the scene, with police identifying teeth and other human bones. Both the Mexican Army and Jalisco Police protected the area, though military agencies soon stopped monitoring the site.

The Searching Mothers Collective had already tipped police off to the site before this second discovery, where a plume of smoke can be seen coming from the oven, which was allegedly still hot. It is believed the site was active for around two days.

One of the women in the group said: "We are here searching in a place the prosecutor said they wouldn't come, and neither would SEMEFO, the corpse identification service.

"The units have already withdrawn simply because there are no skulls or torsos, but the bones we found are human. I don't know what more evidence they want." It is believed an unknown cartel was using the site to dispose of bodies.

The Special Prosecutor's Office for Missing Persons (FEPD) has since opened an investigation into the origins of the site. A statement from the group confirmed some of the findings.

It read: "In an open piece of land used as a rubbish dump, an area was found containing skeletal remains on Monday, October 16." They are now determining whether the bones at the scene were of human origin.

A number of unidentified remains were found over the last year in Jalisco. A surge of 9,0002 cases as of May 2023 has led to the group knuckling down on forensic reports, with a crisis over the number of unsolved cases growing.

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