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EL CASO QUE CONGELÓ A PERÚ: una pareja se despidió en el aeropuerto y nunca volvió a verse

  She never boarded that plane.  Desperate, Antoniel tried calling his mobile phone repeatedly, but only received the off tone.  Antoniel drove frantically back to the airport, demanding answers.  The security personnel, initially skeptical, began reviewing the camera recordings.  They found the farewell. They saw Jordanes walk towards safety, but after that point he vanished.

  There was no record of her at the security checkpoint or anywhere else in the terminal, but the mystery was about to become unfathomable.  When Jordanes’ alarmed family couldn’t contact Antoniel that night, they called the police.  The authorities went to Antoniel’s apartment.  It was empty. His car was found exactly where he left it in the airport parking lot , but Antonel had also disappeared.

  On March 15, 2004, this young couple, Antoniel and Jordanes, disappeared without a trace after saying goodbye at Jorge Chávez International Airport in Lima, Peru.  For 10 years, their families and investigators desperately searched for answers about their whereabouts.  But in 2014 a chance discovery would reveal a disturbing truth that no one could have anticipated.

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  Now let’s find out how it all started.  For 10 years, despair and silence were the only response.  The families of Antoniel and Jordanes clung to hope, while the authorities and even the airport administration seemed to have no leads.  The initial news of the double disappearance hit both families like a tsunami.  In Cuzco, the Mendoza family had prepared a welcome lunch for Jordanes.

The hours passed and the worry turned into anguish.  Calls to Jordanes’ phone went directly to voicemail.  When they finally contacted Antoniel, anxiously awaiting an explanation, his phone was also turned off.  That’s when they contacted Antoniel’s parents, the Torres family, in Lima.  Panic set in. Neither of the two young men, known for their constant communication and responsibility, responded.

  The initial investigation was a chaotic mess of jurisdictions and confusion.  The Peruvian National Police (PNP) and the private security of the Jorge Chávez International Airport, operated by Lima Airport Partners, seemed more interested in disclaiming responsibility than in finding the couple.  The first few days, the most crucial in any missing persons investigation, were lost in bureaucracy.

  The Torres family and the Mendoza family, who traveled in an emergency from Cuzco, found themselves wandering through the airport corridors, showing photos of their children to airline employees and cleaning staff who barely looked at them, absorbed in the constant flow of travelers.  The airport, designed for transience, became a prison of uncertainty for them.

  The first major obstacle was the analysis of the security cameras.  In 2004, CTB coverage was not total.  The grainy, low-resolution tapes confirmed what Antonien had told the police before disappearing himself.  The couple hugged near the check-in counters.  They kissed .  Jordanes turned and walked purposefully toward the entrance of the security zone.

  The cameras captured her entering the line and then nothing.  There was an infamous blind spot, a stretch of several meters between the end of the winding queue and the exact spot where passengers placed their suitcases on the X-ray machine and presented their identification.  Jordanes entered that zone and never came out the other side.

  There were no images of her being intercepted, or talking to anyone, or leaving the line.  It simply evaporated.  Meanwhile, the focus shifted to Antonel.  Why had he disappeared after reporting Jordanes’ absence?  His car was the only physical clue.  It was parked in the short-stay area, exactly where it said it would be.  The vehicle was locked.

  Inside, investigators found a gas station receipt from two days prior, a pair of sunglasses on the dashboard, road maps of Lima and southern Peru, and a gym bag in the trunk.  There were no notes, no signs of a struggle, and no packed luggage.  The car looked like the one belonging to anyone who expects to return in a few minutes.

  Police theorized that Antonel returned to his car after speaking with airport security, and that’s when something or someone intercepted him.  But who?  And how did they know I would be there?  Or was her disappearance connected in a more sinister way to Jordanes’s? To understand the weight of this tragedy, one had to understand who they were.

  They were not reckless adventurers or people with dubious connections.  Jordanes Mendoza, 26, was a recently graduated architect.  Her passion was the restoration of archaeological sites, and her trip to Cusco was partly to visit her family and partly to explore some minor ruins off the usual tourist track for a postgraduate project.

  Her family described her as methodical, brilliant, and perhaps a little shy, but fiercely loyal.  She had a crucial job interview scheduled at one of Lima’s most prestigious architecture firms for the week following her return. His father Carlos repeated to the press with tears in his eyes.  She would never miss a day.  She had plans.

  She would not run away from her own life.  Antoniel Torres, 28, was the perfect complement to Jordanes.  He was a software engineer at an emerging technology company that developed logistics systems for the mining industry, a pillar of the Peruvian economy.  He was analytical, calm, and the main emotional and financial support of his elderly parents who lived in a modest neighborhood in Lima.

  Antoniel was the kind of son who called his parents every night without fail.  They had been together since college, 4 years of a stable and loving relationship.  They had just signed the papers for a new apartment in the Miraflores district overlooking the ocean.  Their wedding was tentatively planned for the following summer. The idea that this couple, at the peak of building a life together, would simply decide to abandon everything, was unthinkable for everyone who knew them.

  However, in the absence of evidence, toxic theories began to fill the void.  The first and most painful for the families was that of the voluntary escape.  The Lima tabloids, eager for a scandal, hinted that Jordanes might have been pregnant and that they were running away from their conservative families.  This theory was quickly crushed when medical records confirmed that this was not the case.

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