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22 days after the disappearance of the 16-year-old student from CCH Naucalpan, the search continues without results, despite searches, drones and canine pairs
WRITING
CANTON GROUP
The disappearance of Kimberly Hilary Moya González It’s been three weeks now and still no answers. The 16-year-old girl, a student at College of Sciences and Humanities Naucalpan campusleft home on October 2 with the intention of making copies for an assignment.
From that moment on, his trail was lost in the streets of San Rafael Chamapaan area known for its difficult access and high levels of insecurity.
The Attorney General’s Office of the State of Mexico (FGJEM) maintains a search operation that involves heavy machinery, canine pairs, drones and specialized divers in nearby bodies of water, without a single conclusive clue having been found so far.
The work is concentrated on two properties in the neighborhood, linked to Gabriel Rafael “N” and Paulo Alberto “N”, both detained and linked to proceedings for the crime of disappearance committed by private individuals.
Although the properties were thoroughly searched, the authorities have not revealed whether traces or belongings of the young woman were found there. The lack of official information and the secrecy in the investigation fuel the frustration of relatives and neighbors, who accuse slowness, lack of coordination and secrecy on the part of the institutions in charge.
Videos from security cameras captured Kimberly walking towards your destination; However, the record is interrupted in a corner covered by the shadow of a tree, the point where his disappearance is presumed to have occurred. Since then, no more cameras have been able to locate her.
“Every day that passes without hearing from her is a blow to the heart,” lamented Mrs. Laura Hernández, a neighbor of Chamapa. “They say they are working, but we don’t see anything. They just come, check, leave and don’t report. The family is desperate and so are we.”
Neighbors have begun to organize citizen brigades to tour ravines and abandoned properties, in response to what they consider a late and disjointed institutional response.
The Person Search Commission of the State of Mexico (COBUPEM) assures that the operations will continue, although without a defined date for new actions.

The post As the days progress and hope diminishes in families… Kimberly remains unlocated – Diario Basta! appeared first on Veritas News.