43 students disappeared—and were never heard from again.
View this email in your browser ([link removed])
[link removed]
[link removed]
Illustration by Dante Aguilera
** After Ayotzinapa: The Cover-Up
------------------------------------------------------------
The second chapter of our three-part investigation ([link removed]) into the abduction of 43 Mexican college students, which launches today, digs into the government cover-up of the crime. Weeks after the disappearance, the Mexican government released its official story: Corrupt police had taken the students and handed them to members of a local gang, who killed them. But parents of the students had their doubts. As this latest show reveals, human rights lawyer Omar Gómez Trejo and a group of international experts begin to dismantle the government’s explanation of what happened to the young men.
The show is co-reported by Reveal’s Anayansi Diaz-Cortes and National Security Archive senior analyst Kate Doyle, who has spent the last 30 years investigating human rights violations in Latin America. Since 1992, Doyle has worked with Latin American human rights groups, truth commissions, prosecutors and judges to obtain government files from secret archives that shed light on state violence. I talked with Doyle about what drew her to the Ayotzinapa case—and what she learned from digging into the story.
How did you initially get involved in investigating what happened to the Ayotzinapa 43?
What initially pulled me into the Ayotzinapa case was that the lawyers who represent the families of the disappeared boys asked if I would assist them and support their investigation. This was in 2017. At that point, the investigation in Mexico had stalled out. The reason why they wanted to pull in the National Security Archive is that they knew there was this U.S. element in the case. The drug trafficking gang in Iguala that participated in kidnapping and taking the boys away was a gang that actually trafficked massive amounts of heroin and cocaine in the American Midwest, through distribution points in Chicago.
How do you feel like working on this show changed your understanding of Mexico and the United States?
I feel that the case exposes the ways in which this shared drug war that Mexico and the United States have both pursued for many, many years seems to promote violence rather than slow it. The drug war seems to exacerbate crime rather than make either country safer. You know, we always look at Mexico and talk about how there are so many deaths in Mexico. It’s true, there have been hundreds of thousands of deaths from the drug war, of people complicit in trafficking and ordinary people who die as “collateral damage.” But hundreds of thousands of people in the United States have also died—from overdoses of opioids. So something about this idea of the drug war is not working.
When you talk about this case with family and friends, what feels like the most important piece of the story to you?
There are two elements of the show that I hope shine through. One is I hope people feel compassion for what's happening in Mexico and for the families themselves. The mothers in the show stand in for so many hundreds of thousands of people in Mexico who are missing people and who are desperate to figure out what happened to their loved ones. The other thing is that despite this terrifying crime, despite the fact that the previous government—under President Peña Nieto—failed to solve this case and, in fact, participated in a cover up of what really happened, despite all that, challenging that level of impunity and injustice is not impossible. You don't need a superman. Omar Gómez Trejo is just a guy. He's a human rights lawyer. He cares deeply about the families, he cares about this case, and he really cares about solving it. He always said to us that the only solution to cracking this wall of impunity and injustice is to use the law. You use the law. When you arrest people, you talk to them
and you offer them incentives, and maybe they'll talk to you. If they don't talk to you, well, then you give them a trial, and they go to jail, but you don't torture them. If you find out that there are perpetrators, who were part of the military or the federal police, you arrest them, you don't cover that up, you don't hide that. I hope that we can come away from this knowing that justice isn't some kind of nebulous idea, but it's actually made up of actions and laws.
Listen to the series: After Ayotzinapa ([link removed])
The truth won’t reveal itself. Help us deliver the stories that make a difference. Donate today.
Donate ([link removed])
** Big Impact: Lawmakers Are Taking Action Against Amazon
------------------------------------------------------------
Marie Steele works as a picker at Amazon's Shakopee, Minn., fulfillment center in 2020. Credit: Leila Navidi/Star Tribune via AP
Lawmakers and government officials have recently begun taking aim at the relentless quotas that have caused Amazon’s worker injury crisis.
In 2019, our Behind the Smiles investigation ([link removed]) showed for the first time that injury rates in Amazon warehouses were far higher than the industry average, due to the company’s relentless drive for speedier shipping. Then, we obtained internal Amazon data that revealed ([link removed]) the company had been deceiving the public about its safety crisis even as it had been getting worse.
For years, Amazon didn’t have much to fear from safety regulators. But now lawmakers and regulators are taking action in new ways.
* California: A new state law ([link removed]) , prompted in part by our reporting, prohibits companies from enforcing unsafe work quotas.
* Washington: Washington lawmakers introduced a new bill outlawing unsafe warehouse work quotas. Taking a similar approach to the new California law, the bill says warehouse workers can’t be forced to meet quotas that interfere with rest and meal periods, bathroom breaks and other health and safety regulations. Amazon, the state’s largest employer, has also repeatedly tried to block and interfere with safety inspections, according to court records filed by state officials.
* Nationwide: A federal watchdog agency announced that it would scrutinize how safety officials have been handling an increase in injuries at warehouses. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Inspector General will conduct an audit to see what actions the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has taken to address the rise in injuries, Bloomberg reported ([link removed]) .
Read the story detailing the impact: Amazon’s Warehouse Quotas Have Been Injuring Workers for Years. Now, Officials Are Taking Action ([link removed])
Explore the full project: Amazon’s Internal Records Expose the True Toll of its Relentless Drive for Domination ([link removed])
This newsletter is written by Sarah Mirk. Drop her a line (mailto:
[email protected]?subject=weekly%20reveal%20feedback) with feedback and ideas!
============================================================
** Twitter ([link removed])
** Facebook ([link removed])
** Website ([link removed])
Copyright © 2021 The Center for Investigative Reporting, All rights reserved.
You're on this list because you signed up for The Weekly Reveal newsletter.
Our mailing address is:
The Center for Investigative Reporting
1400 65th St., Suite 200
Emeryville, CA 94608
USA
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.