CA CA - Maria del Carmen Lopez, 63, Riverside, kidnapped from 2nd home in Mexico, 9 Feb 2023

imstilla.grandma

Believer of Miracles
Joined
Jul 7, 2018
Messages
31,040
Reaction score
211,480
A Southern California woman living in Mexico was kidnapped from her Pueblo Nuevo home, and the FBI on Thursday announced a reward of up to $20,000 for information leading to her location.

Maria del Carmen Lopez, a 63-year-old United States citizen who divides her time between her home in Mexico and staying with family in Riverside and Los Angeles counties, has been missing for more than a month, according to Laura Eimiller of the FBI's Los Angeles office.
Authorities believe Maria del Carmen Lopez, a 63-year-old United States citizen, was kidnapped from her home in Mexico on Feb. 9.

Lopez is believed to have been kidnapped on Feb. 9 from her residence in Pueblo Nuevo, Colima, according to Eimiller.

"The FBI is conducting this investigation jointly with law enforcement authorities in Mexico," Eimiller said in a statement.

Before moving to Mexico, she lived in the Southern California region, Eimiller said.
Lopez is Hispanic, 5 feet, 2 inches tall, and weighs about 160 pounds. She has blonde hair, brown eyes and "permanent/tattooed" eyeliner.

Anyone with information about Lopez’s physical location is urged to contact their local FBI office or the nearest American Embassy or Consulate. In Los Angeles, the FBI can be reached at 310 477-6565. A tip may also be submitted online at tips.fbi.gov.

Lopez's home in Pueblo Nuevo is in Colima, a state the U.S. Department of State is urging American travelers to avoid due to a spike in kidnappings and homicides. It's one of many parts of the country the U.S. government has identified as unsafe for travelers recently. The U.S. recently issued its highest-level warning, outright telling travelers not to go to Guerrero, Colima, Michoacan, Sinaloa, Tamaulipas and Zacatecas.
 
The investigation into Lopez’s disappearance was opened by the Colima Attorney General’s Office on the day of the suspected kidnapping and the Mexican Attorney General’s Specialized Prosecutor for Organized Crime has since requested to take the case, the statement from Colima authorities said.
 
March 17 2023
''Her children are now pleading for her safe return after this terrifying event which they believed to be entirely unprovoked.

"There was never any sort of threats, there was never any enemies," Maria's daughter Zonia told CBS Los Angeles. "Anything that would indicate that she was in any kind of trouble."

A family member only identified as a cousin of Lopez's children reported that they saw a group of as many as five people at her home at the time of her disappearance.
large.jpg
Maria del Carmen LopezFBI
"Someone did see. There was a car that drove into the property. There was an exchange of words, they did hear her say she would not get into the car," Zonia said. "Two individuals picked her up and another one came out of the van. They had their heads covered and they covered her mouth and that's when they took her."

Her children believe she was targeted in a crime of opportunity, and that she had no connection to any gangs or criminal activity of any sort.

"I don't think it was isolated, to end up at a town that's so remote, from the city, you'd really have to kind of be indicated — go there," Zonia said.''
 
“It’s been a roller coaster for the last 39 days. It definitely seems like we’re actually living inside of a nightmare,” said Zonia, Maria’s daughter.

Zonia was alerted by family members in Mexico about her mother’s kidnapping. The kidnappers then made contact with Zonia, asking for a bounty for her mother.

“It was shocking. It was an actual, it’s like your body and your mind. Everything goes into a state that obviously you’ve never been in. It’s disbelief, but at the same time, as weird as it sounds, some kind of comfort because you’re at least having some kind of communication,” Zonia said.

“We’re hoping that in the next few days, that the government in Mexico gives full support to the authorities there and their troops to conduct the search. It’s a small state, it’s a small town, that they enable everything in their power, so that they can find my mother and that this doesn’t become another kidnapping, where it just goes unsolved,” said Zonia.
 
The family of a woman kidnapped in Mexico says she may have been targeted.

It comes as the FBI offers $20,000 for information leading to the return of Maria del Carmen Lopez, an American who had been living in Mexico for the past nine years.

“There was never any sort of threats. There was never any enemies, anything that would indicate that she was in any kind of trouble,” said Zonia Lopez, daughter of the missing woman.

Zonia Lopez and her brother Tony said they are puzzled as to how and why their mother went missing.

[...]

FBI investigators said they believe the mother of seven was kidnapped on Feb. 9 from her home.

“Someone did see there was a car that drove into the property, and there was an exchange of words. They did hear her say that she would not get into the car.” Zonia Lopez said.

 
Zonia Lopez, the kidnapped woman’s grown daughter, held a news conference in Los Angeles Wednesday, during which she revealed that the last time the family heard from her mom was eight weeks ago, when the kidnappers sent them a proof-of-life audio recording, reported the station KTLA.

“She is pleading for her life, and she names a few of my brothers and sisters, and she’s saying: ‘please hurry, act quickly, my children, and give them what they want. My life depends on it,’” the daughter said, adding that she and her siblings have not heard anything from their mom since.
Kidnapping victim Maria del Carmen Lopez, 68
 
  • Maria del Carmen Lopez was kidnapped Feb. 9 in Pueblo Nuevo
  • The FBI has offered a $20,000 reward for information
  • 550 Americans are currently missing in Mexico, according to a recent report
(NewsNation) — A daughter is making a desperate plea for information in the disappearance of her mother, who was kidnapped from her home in Mexico.

Maria del Carmen Lopez was kidnapped Feb. 9 in Pueblo Nuevo, a municipality in the southwestern Mexican state of Colima, the FBI’s Los Angeles field office said in a release Thursday.

The agency is offering a $20,000 reward for information the the missing 63-year-old U.S. citizen.

“It’s been 37 days and we still do not have our mother with us,” Zonia Lopez, Maria’s daughter, said Friday on “CUOMO.” “We need our mother back.”

Zonia Lopez said the kidnappers have made a ransom demand, which the family is not able to pay. She has no idea why Mexican cartels would target her mother.

“My mother is living a quiet life. It’s a very small town, there was no enemies, never any signs of threat or anything that she would be in any kind of danger,” Lopez said.

Former FBI Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer said what happened to Lopez is a “typical” type of kidnap-for-ransom scenario perpetrated by Mexican cartels.

“They’re pros,” Coffindaffer said of the suspects. “This is strictly them profiling (Lopez) as somebody who was a U.S. citizen and could be able to pay such a ransom.”
 
NewsNation "Missing" video -- May 13, 2024



(NewsNation) — As Americans celebrated Mother’s Day on Sunday, one Southern California family marked another holiday without their matriarch, who was kidnapped in Mexico over a year ago and remains missing.

Maria del Carmen Lopez, a 63-year-old U.S. citizen and grandmother of 19, was taken by armed men from her home in Pueblo Nuevo, Mexico, on Feb. 9, 2023. Her daughter Zonia Lopez spent Sunday putting up missing person posters in the area, now over 400 days since her mother’s abduction.

*****
“The FBI has requested permission to go into Colima to take over this case and see what these men have to say, but the state will not grant them permission to go in and investigate themselves,” she said, referring to the western Mexican state where her mother was taken.

*****
With the criminal probe stalled, the California family has channeled their despair into activism to draw more attention and resources to the case. They launched a website called Justice4Carmen with a petition urging U.S. lawmakers to assist in securing her safe return.

“If anybody can go into that website … sign the petition, it takes literally a minute or two to sign. But it does make a big difference to us,” Elizabeth Lopez said. “That’s the goal of the petition.”

*****
 
So at first I thought it was a town close to the border, however it's not. So this must have been thought of very closely. I am guessing Americans have money, so they will pay. At least that is what the kidnappers thought.
1715618583104.png
 

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
190
Guests online
1,547
Total visitors
1,737

Forum statistics

Threads
594,486
Messages
18,006,873
Members
229,417
Latest member
aimilino01
Back
Top