The Mexican woman killed in a drug cartel shootout in the abduction of four Americans last week has been identified as a 33-year-old church official who works with children at a summer school.
Arely Servando, 33, found The Mexican woman killed in a drug cartel shootout in the abduction of four Americans last week has been identified as a 33-year-old church official who works with children at a summer school.Arely Servando, 33, found herself in the midst of a horrific March 3 ambush when Latavia "Tay" McGee, Shaeed Woodard, Zindell Brown and Eric James Williams were kidnapped in crime-ridden Matamoros.
Tamaulipas Governor Américo Villareal revealed that she was hit by a bullet while standing about a block and a half from gunfire from the Scorpions of the Gulf Cartel, the Daily Mail reported. Servando, a graduate of the National College of Vocational Technical Education, worked with children at the Summer Bible School and was a member of the Association of Young Ambassadors of Pentecostal Power, the newspaper said. Priscila Andrade, the association's president, told El Universal: “Arelita, as I affectionately call her, is my vice president and much more.
"My little sister, best friend and companion," she added.
On Thursday, March 9, the notorious gang apologized and denounced five members they believed were responsible for the attack.
The Scorpions team said it "decided to remove those directly involved in and responsible for the events" related to the abduction, according to a letter leaked to the Associated Press by a state law enforcement source. Tamaulipas.
McGee and Williams were found injured in a dingy cabin on Tuesday, but Woodard and Brown were killed.
Meanwhile, Mexican authorities are pursuing a possible drug trafficking motive for the kidnapping.
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