Email death threat arrives
for lawyer of Ochoa's family
The News Mexico
March 21, 2002
By By Cynthia Hawes and Conrad Fox
The attorney representing the family of murdered human rights lawyer
Digna Ochoa received a death threat Monday, a week after she accused the
city police handling the Ochoa investigation of incompetence
The threat arrived by email, and resembled the many threats Ochoa herself
had received before she was murdered Oct. 19.
The message was not written in full sentences but contained scattered words,
including "car crash," "accident," "lawyer" and "urgent." A letter found in
the office where Ochoa was killed used a similar format, with threatening
words cut from a newspaper pasted across a page.
"We are worried about the similarity in the messages," Zamora told
TheNewsMexico.com, sounding less shaken than disgusted. She said that
"lawyer" could refer not only to her, but to Pilar Noriega, attorney with
the Mexico City Human Rights Commission and former colleague of both Ochoa
and Zamora.
All three lawyers received numerous death threats in the past for their
involvement in politically sensitive cases. Monday's message was the first
threat against Zamora since Ochoa was found shot to death in her Mexico City
office.
The police investigation into Ochoa's death has so far proved
fruitless but many suspect the military was involved. Many of Ochoa's cases,
including the defense of accused Zapatista rebels, brought her up against
members of the powerful military establishment. One of these was current
federal attorney general and former army prosecutor, Rafael Macedo de la
Concha.
Last week, a local newspaper published information leaked from the Ochoa
investigation that suggested the police considered suicide the most likely
explanation for her death. The story unleashed a storm of controversy, with
human rights groups calling the leak a further sign of incompetence in the
handling of an investigation that seems to be going nowhere.
There were also suggestions that a suicide verdict might be politically
expedient for the government.
"With a suicide there are no culprits," Zamora told TheNewsMexico.com.
City Attorney General Bernardo Batiz denied the accusation, calling the
anonymous police investigator who revealed facts to the newspaper a
"traitor" and "mercenary." He admitted the police was considering the
possibility of suicide in the Ochoa case, but that it was only one of many
lines of investigation.
The day after the story was published, Zamora accompanied Ochoa's family in
accusing the police of dragging its feet in the investigation. She said the
newspaper's source within the investigation had probably leaked the
information for financial benefit.
She noted the police investigation into threats Ochoa received months
before her death never made any progress and was quickly filed.
She did not, however, go as far as Ochoa's brother, Jesus Ochoa, who said
Batiz had "come up against powerful political interests within the
government" that wanted to sidetrack the investigation.
Zamora told TheNewsMexico.com she has reported the threat to the police.