Saúl Noé Martínez Ortega

Martínez,
a 36-year-old crime reporter, was found dead in the northern state of Chihuahua a week after he was abducted by armed men in
neighboring Sonora
state.

Martínez
was seized on the night of April 16, 2007, outside a municipal police station
in Agua Prieta. Press reports said that after a high-speed chase, Martínez
stopped his SUV at the entrance to the station and called for help. But heavily
armed gunmen forced the reporter into their vehicle and drove off. On the
morning of April 23, a passerby discovered the journalist’s body wrapped in a
blanket on a road outside the town of Nuevo Casas Grandes,
near the border between Chihuahua and Sonora, according to
press reports and CPJ interviews.

Martínez
had been dead for approximately six days, said José Larrinaga Talamantes, a
spokesman for the state attorney general’s office in Hermosillo. He had been beaten and apparently
died of a blow to the head, the journalist’s brother, Erick Martínez Ortega,
told CPJ.

Martínez
covered crime during night shifts for
Interdiario, an Agua Prieta newspaper that published three times a
week. Although investigators initially cited the reporter’s work as a possible
motive, they have not disclosed further leads or arrests in the case.

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