California Boy Missing in Mexico Found Dead in Secret Burial Months Later

The body of a California man who disappeared about two months ago was discovered at a secret burial and two other people were arrested for murder.

Californian Wilmer ‘Dino’ Trivett disappeared on Feb. 11 while camping on Mexico’s Baja California peninsula.

A local man and his sister were arrested in connection with the 80-year-old’s murder, prosecutor Daniel de los Angeles Rosa said.

He added that the incident originated from a road conflict. Trivett’s stolen mobile home was set on fire on Feb. 23.

A specially trained dead dog discovered the frame near the Pacific coast town of Todos Santos.

De los Angeles Rosa said Mr Trivett, from Markleeville, near Lake Tahoe, paid the two suspects around £2,500 following an earlier car accident, but the couple was not enough money, allegedly kidnapping M. Trivett and then allegedly killed him.

Under Mexican law, the suspects’ full names were released, but they were known as Juan Hector ‘N’ and his sister Joseline Guadalupe ‘N’.

The boy used to travel to the Baja California peninsula with his wife, who passed away in 2019. He resumed his travels to Mexico last year.

The protection of U. S. citizens in Mexico has been highlighted through a number of missing persons cases.

The FBI presented a $40,000 eulogy for a California woman who disappeared in the Morelos state of Tepatitlán while walking her dog.

Monica De Leon Barba, 29, forced into a van on Nov. 29, 2022.

Her friends sounded the alarm after she didn’t show up at her local gym and when they went looking for her, they discovered her dog loose in town.

Ms. De Leon Barba had been in Mexico since June 2022. He went there to paint over his photograph and make a stopover at his family’s home.

Four months after her abduction, the FBI presented a reward of up to $40,000 to locate the missing woman.

In one incident, two sisters disappeared with a friend after crossing the U. S. border into Mexico to sell clothes.

Maritza Trinidad Perez Rios, 47, Marina Perez Rios, 48, and her friend, Dora Alicia Cervantes Saenz, 53, disappeared on their way to a flea market.

U. S. Customs and Border ProtectionThe U. S. Department of Health said the three entered Mexico from Peñitas, a small Texas border town, on Feb. 24.

Peñitas is a few hundred meters from the Rio Grande.

Peñitas police leader Roel Bermea said their families are in contact with Mexican authorities, who are investigating their disappearance.

Now, Ludy Arredondo, the cousin of the Perez sisters, has spoken out about the ordeal.

She wrote: “Today is the 16th and we still don’t know about my cousins Maritza Perez, Marina Perez and Dora Cervantes.

“These are strong, exhausting, desperate days, without knowing what is happening, workers, just people who have nothing to do with illegal situations.

“They just went to work. So far, the FBI has joined the search for them after so many days of their disappearance, time is running out and it is in their favor. “

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