The
body of Maria Susana Flores Gamez was found Saturday lying near an
assault rifle on a rural road in a mountainous area of the drug-plagued state of Sinaloa, the chief state prosecutor said Monday. It was unclear if she had used the weapon.
"She was with the gang of criminals, but we cannot say whether she participated in the shootout," state prosecutor Marco Antonio Higuera said. "That's what we're going to have to investigate."
The slender, 5-foot-7-inch brunette was voted the 2012 Woman of Sinaloa
in a beauty pageant in February. In June, the model competed with other
seven contestants for the more prestigious state beauty contest, Our
Beauty Sinaloa, but didn't win. The Our Beauty state winners compete for
the Miss Mexico title, whose holder represents the country in the
international Miss Universe.
Higuera said Flores Gamez
was traveling in one of the vehicles that engaged soldiers in an
hours-long chase and running gun battle on Saturday near her native city
of Guamuchil in the state of Sinaloa, home to Mexico's most powerful
drug cartel. Higuera said two other members of the drug gang were killed
and four were detained.
The
shootout began when the gunmen opened fire on a Mexican army patrol.
Soldiers gave chase and cornered the gang at a safe house in the town of
Mocorito. The other men escaped, and the gunbattle continued along a
nearby roadway, where the gang's vehicles were eventually stopped. Six
vehicles, drugs and weapons were seized following the confrontation.
It
was at least the third instance in which a beauty queen or pageant
contestants have been linked to Mexico's violent drug gangs, a theme so
common it was the subject of a critically acclaimed 2011 movie.
In
"Miss Bala," Mexico's official submission to the Best Foreign Language
Film category of this year's Academy Awards, a young woman competing for
Miss Baja California becomes an unwilling participant in a drug-running
ring, finally getting arrested for deeds she was forced into
performing.
In real life,
former Miss Sinaloa Laura Zuniga was stripped of her 2008 crown in the
Hispanoamerican Queen pageant after she was detained on suspicion of
drug and weapons violations. She was later released without charges.
Zuniga
was detained in western Mexico in late 2010 along with seven men, some
of them suspected drug traffickers. Authorities found a large stash of
weapons, ammunition and $53,300 with them inside a vehicle.
In
2011, a Colombian former model and pageant contestant was detained
along with Jose Jorge Balderas, an accused drug trafficker and suspect
in the 2010 bar shooting of Salvador Cabanas, a former star for Paraguay's national football team and Mexico's Club America. She was also later released.
Higuera said Flores Gamez's body has been turned over to relatives for burial.
"This
is a sad situation," Higuera told a local radio station. She had been
enrolled in media courses at a local university, and had been modeling
and in pageants since at least 2009.
Javier
Valdez, the author of a 2009 book about narco ties to beauty pageants
entitled "Miss Narco," said "this is a recurrent story."
"There
is a relationship, sometimes pleasant and sometimes tragic, between
organized crime and the beauty queens, the pageants, the beauty industry
itself," Valdez said.
"It is a
question of privilege, power, money, but also a question of need," said
Valdez. "For a lot of these young women, it is easy to get involved
with organized crime, in a country that doesn't offer many opportunities
for young people."
Sometimes drug traffickers seek out beauty queens, but sometimes the models themselves look for narco boyfriends, Valdez said.
"I
once wrote about a girl I knew of who was desperate to get a narco
boyfriend," he said. "She practically took out a classified ad saying
'Looking for a Narco'."
The
stories seldom end well. In the best of cases, a beautiful woman with a
tear-stained face is marched before the press in handcuffs. In the worst
of cases, they simply disappear.
"They
are disposable objects, the lowest link in the chain of criminal
organizations, the young men recruited as gunmen and the pretty young
women who are tossed away in two or three years, or are turned into
police or killed," Valdez said.
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