Mexican police botched the murder investigation of a journalist working near the US border in 2004 by torturing suspects and mishandling evidence, the country's human's rights commission said, according to a Reuters report.
Roberto Mora, editorial director of El Manana newspaper in Nuevo Laredo, just across the border from Laredo, Texas, regularly wrote columns about drug trafficking and corrupt officials before he was stabbed to death in front of his home. Police arrested a US citizen, Mario Medina, and his gay partner for the murder, saying it was a crime of passion. Medina was later murdered in prison and his partner is still in jail.
In a new report on the case, the human rights commission accused local authorities of torturing the men to force a confession and said medical examiners failed to include important forensic evidence in their reports on the case. It also faults local human rights officials for overlooking the violations at the time of the murder.
"There is evidence to suggest members of the police carried out acts of intimidation against Mario Medina Vazquez so he would confess to his involvement in the murder," it said, calling for the case to be reopened.
Daniel Rosas, managing editor of El Manana said he wanted a federal investigation "to try to clear up how this crime really happened."
Twenty-one journalists have been killed in Mexico since 2000, seven of them in direct reprisal for their work, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists.