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EL Pirulí: el SANGRIENTO misterio de su ESPOSA… y la PUERTA hacia la MUERTE

No one investigated why the scene was altered before the experts arrived. Because sometimes the enemy doesn’t come from the street, he sleeps under your own roof or worse , he knows exactly when you’re going to open that door.  Today you’re going to discover four things about the murder that Mexico chose to forget instead of investigating.

[music] First, you’re going to learn about the hours leading up to the murder.  Victor Turbe was 51 years old.  He was at his home in Atizapán de Zaragoza on Sunday, November 29, 1987 because his show in Tijuana had been cancelled.  He spent the afternoon watching television with his wife Irma while they waited for their daughter Lucy to return from going out with her boyfriend, and according to testimonies he received a mysterious call hours before there was a knock at his door at midnight.

Second, I’m going to show you the night of terror in cinematic detail. Around 11 p.m. the doorbell rang insistently. Victor got up from the recliner in his slippers, thinking it was Lucy who had left without her keys.  He opened the door confidently and three professional hitmen, without saying a word, shot him six times from less than 8 meters away with execution-level precision while his wife and son listened from inside.

   They ran downstairs to find him bleeding out on the threshold with a look of utter shock on his face.  Third, you will discover the leaden silence that buried the investigation.  Irma and her son Victor Manuel refused to cooperate with authorities, saying it was a simple robbery, even though they didn’t steal anything. Secretary Fernando Aranda received an anonymous call days later with a grave voice saying only “dead”.

  Before hanging up, the crime scene was altered before the official investigation and the case was closed in December 1987, [music] just a month later, due to a lack of family cooperation.  And fourth, I’m going to reveal to you the three theories that the Attorney General’s Office followed, but never resolved.

  That Victor was having an affair with the wife of a high-ranking drug trafficker, that he owed millions for land in Puerto Vallarta to people involved in organized crime, and that his connections with drug traffickers who hired him for private parties finally caught up with him .  Tap subscription.  Now, if you want to understand how the first murder of a celebrity linked to drug trafficking in Mexico was covered up by the complicit silence of those who should have demanded justice, it’s because what follows is documented in police files that reveal

substantial modifications of the crime scene. Testimonies from neighbors who saw three men fleeing without haste, as if they had just finished a professional job.  And the reality is that when the victim is executed with six expanding bullets at point-blank range, it ‘s not an assault, it’s a message. Turn on notifications because this is the story of how Mexico learned that drug cartels could touch anyone, even their idols, and that the silence of the survivors will be more terrifying than the gunshots themselves.  But to understand

why the murder of Victor Turbe was so brutally calculated, you need to know who he was in the months leading up to that fateful night.  Because the lollipop didn’t die by mistake, it was a premeditated execution, and executions have reasons. Victor Iturbe Fernandez was born on October 24, 1936 in Irapuato, Guanajuato.

Of humble origins, she discovered her voice at a young age and decided to dedicate herself to singing.  During the 1960s and 1970s he became one of the most successful ballad singers in Mexico.  Her soft, romantic voice captivated generations. Songs like Verónica, dedicated to Verónica Castro.  [music] Happiness, lie to me.

  And my second love was hymns at weddings and quinceañera serenades.  But by the mid-80s, although he was still a beloved figure, his career had lost some of its luster. Musical tastes were changing, Spanish rock was emerging, and Victor, at 50 years old, no longer filled stadiums like in his golden years.

  He was still working constantly, casino appearances, private parties, lots of corporate events, but he was more of a nostalgic veteran than a rising star. And it was precisely in that circuit of private performances where, according to  subsequent police investigations, Victor began to move in dangerous circles.

  Because in the 80s, before drug trafficking became as visible as it is today, the most powerful drug traffickers were low- profile individuals who enjoyed romantic music and hired famous artists for private parties where drugs, alcohol, and money flowed freely.  And Victor Turbe, needing to maintain an income, accepted those performances.

She sang at parties for people whose money did not come from legitimate sources, and according to accounts that circulated after her death, she developed personal relationships with some of those businessmen.  One of the strongest theories that the Attorney General’s Office investigated, although it was never able to prove, was that Victor had had an affair with the wife of a high-ranking drug trafficker.

The exact details were never made public.  The woman’s name was never officially revealed, but multiple police sources confirmed that this line of investigation existed and seemed promising until Victor’s family stopped cooperating.  The second theory involved money.  According to investigation documents, Víctor had invested in land in Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco.

  It was a joint venture with other people, and apparently the deal went wrong.  Victor owed millions of dollars and the people he owed were not the type to accept excuses or payment plans.  The third theory was more general, but equally ominous: that Victor simply knew too much, that he had seen too much at those private parties, that he had overheard conversations he shouldn’t have, and that someone decided that was an unacceptable risk.

  And here comes the second thing I promised you.  The night of terror reconstructed minute by minute. Sunday, November 29, 1987, a gray day in Mexico City.  Victor Turbe was in a good mood that morning because for the first time in weeks he had no work commitments.  His scheduled performance that night at the Tijuana Casino had been cancelled for reasons that were never made clear.

So he decided to spend a quiet Sunday at home with his family.  His residence is in the Las Arboledas subdivision, municipality of Atizapán de Zaragoza, in the State of Mexico.  It was a large and comfortable house, that symbol of the success he had achieved with his voice: Two floors, a large garden, a garage for several cars, in an exclusive neighborhood where businessmen, politicians, and entertainment figures lived.

In the afternoon, Victor was watching television with his wife Irma Perez de Anda.  They talked, they laughed, everything seemed normal.  His daughter Lucy, Lucila de Anda, from his marriage to Irma, asked them for permission to go out with her boyfriend. Victor agreed and Lucy left around 8 pm.

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