Camargo massacre


The Camargo massacre occurred on 22 January 2021, in the Santa Anita of Camargo Municipality, Tamaulipas, Mexico. Nineteen people—including 16 Guatemalan migrants, 2 Mexican nationals, and 1 Salvadoran national acting as smugglers—were shot and their remains incinerated inside a vehicle. In September 2023, 11 members of the elite Special Operations Group were sentenced to 50 years in prison for the killings, while a 12th officer received a 19-year sentence for his cooperation with the prosecution.

Background

Camargo is situated in the “Little Border” or “Frontera Chica” region, a strategic corridor used for the illicit transit of narcotics and migrants into Texas. The territory is a site of long-standing conflict between the Gulf Cartel and the Cártel del Noreste, a splinter group of the former Los Zetas organization. Historically, this rivalry has made the region a center for extreme violence.
The Special Operations Group was a 150-member elite tactical unit of the Tamaulipas State Guard. Formerly known as CAIET, the unit had a long-standing reputation for human rights abuses, including forced disappearances. Following the Camargo investigation and trial, the unit was officially disbanded.

Massacre

On 12 January 2021, a group of approximately 30 migrants departed from Comitancillo and San Marcos, Guatemala. By 22 January, the group was traveling through Tamaulipas in three vehicles. Following an anonymous tip, authorities discovered two charred vehicles on a dirt road in Santa Anita. Inside a Chevrolet Silverado, investigators found 19 bodies. A Toyota Sequoia was also found abandoned at the scene.
Forensic analysis revealed that the Silverado had sustained 113 bullet impacts. Although the gunfire was extensive, no shell casings were found at the site; investigators later determined that the officers had collected the brass casings to conceal their presence.

Victims

The victims were mostly indigenous Mam migrants from rural villages in Guatemala.
NameNationalityOriginRole
Élfegio Roliberto Miranda DíazGuatemalanSan Francisco, ComitancilloMigrant
Marvin Alberto Tomás LópezGuatemalanLas Flores, ComitancilloMigrant
Adán Coronado MarroquínGuatemalanComitancilloMigrant
Edgar López y LópezGuatemalanChicajalaj, ComitancilloMigrant
Osmar Neftalí Miranda BaltazarGuatemalanChicajalaj, ComitancilloMigrant
Rivaldo Danilo Jiménez RamírezGuatemalanTuilelén, ComitancilloMigrant
Anderson Marco Antulio PabloGuatemalanNueva Esperanza, ComitancilloMigrant
Iván Gudiel Pablo TomásGuatemalanPeña Flor, ComitancilloMigrant
Santa Cristina García PérezGuatemalanPeña Flor, ComitancilloMigrant
Uber Feliciano VásquezGuatemalanEl Porvenir, ComitancilloMigrant
Rubelsy Elías Tomás IsidroGuatemalanEl Duraznal, ComitancilloMigrant
Dora Amelia López RafaelGuatemalanLa Estancia, SipacapaMigrant
Brandon David García RamírezGuatemalanGranados, Baja VerapazMigrant
Leyda Siomara Gonzáles VásquezGuatemalanConcepción Tutuapa, San MarcosMigrant
Madelyn Estéfanie García RamírezGuatemalanGranados, Baja VerapazMigrant
Paola Damaris Zacarías GabrielGuatemalanCatarina, San MarcosMigrant
Jesús Martínez GuerreroMexicanSmuggler
Daniel Pérez QuirósMexicanSmuggler
UnidentifiedSalvadoranSmuggler

Legal proceeding

Evidence and trial

The prosecution’s case was built on a massive synthesis of evidence, involving the testimony of 80 witnesses, including forensic experts, local residents, and other migrants who had been part of the larger convoy but were not present in the two vehicles targeted. These accounts refuting the official police narrative, which falsely asserted that officers had merely discovered the vehicles already incinerated following a shootout between rival cartels.
The survivors testified that GOPES units intercepted the convoy and opened fire without provocation. This evidence, corroborated by the testimony of cooperating officer Ismael Vázquez, allowed the court to determine that the defendants had not only executed the victims but had also systematically altered the crime scene. This tampering included the purposeful collection of shell casings and the incineration of the remains to conceal the officers' involvement in the massacre.

Sentencing

In September 2023, a judge found 11 officers guilty sentencing each to 50 years in prison. Vázquez was sentenced to 19 years for his cooperation. The court also mandated reparations of approximately 3.8 million pesos to be paid to each victim's family.

Reaction

In Guatemala, President Alejandro Giammattei declared three days of national mourning for the victims.
The United States government confirmed that three of the convicted officers had received tactical training through U.S. State Department programs in 2016 and 2017. While the U.S. Embassy stated the training was compliant with the Leahy Law at the time.