An Iranian policeman ties the noose around the neck of Majid Ghasemi before being publicly hanged in east Tehran 29 September 2002.
Residents of the Iranian capital were treated to a public display of revolutionary justice, with five convicted gang rapists executed by hanging at dawn at different sites in the capital.
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A naked woman hanged in a bridge:
Members of a drug cartel kidnapped a woman from her house and hung her half-naked on a road bridge as a warning,
Members of a drug cartel kidnapped a woman from her house and hung her half-naked on a road bridge as a warning,
Five alleged members of a powerful Mexican cartel were charged with aggravated kidnapping and murder on
Half-naked woman hanged on a bridge
Members
of a drug cartel kidnapped a woman from her house and hung her
half-naked on a road bridge as a warning to their enemies.
It is likely that the incident happened in Mexico...
5 alleged Mexican cartel members charged in kidnapping of 4 Americans
Five
alleged members of a powerful Mexican cartel were charged with
aggravated kidnapping and murder on Friday in connection to the
kidnapping of four Americans, and the killing of two of them, in the
border city of Matamoros.
The Attorney
General's Office of Tamaulipas announced the charges a day after the
Gulf Cartel allegedly took responsibility for the kidnapping.
The
five men were found tied up near a pickup truck on Thursday morning and
a handwritten note was found placed on the windshield of the truck,
whose author or authors say they belong to the Gulf Cartel, the dominant
organized crime group in this part of Mexico.
The note said some Gulf Cartel members were responsible for the kidnapping and killings and apologized for their actions.
"We
have decided to deliver those involved and directly responsible," the
note said, presumably referring to the five men found tied up at the
scene.
Multiple different law enforcement agencies, along with members of the Mexican army, responded to the scene.
Police
allegedly found two weapons inside the truck when they detained the
five men -- an AK-47 and an AR-15 -- as well as four AK-47 magazines,
three AR-15 magazines and cartridges of different calibers, according to
a copy of the police report from Mexican authorities obtained by ABC
News from a source close to the investigation.
Police found the men inside the truck with their hands tied with belts, along with the note, according to the police report.
Multiple sources close to the investigation said they believe the note left on the windshield to be legitimate.
Neither ABC News nor U.S. officials have been able to independently verify the authenticity of the note.
The
four kidnapped Americans -- Eric James Williams, Zindell Brown and
cousins Latavia "Tay" McGee and Shaeed Woodard -- drove Friday morning
into Matamoros, in the northeastern state of Tamaulipas just south of
Brownsville, Texas.
McGee had traveled from South Carolina to Mexico for a cosmetic medical procedure.
Soon
after crossing the border, "unidentified gunmen fired upon the
passengers in the vehicle," and then put the four Americans in another
car and fled, the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City said.
Mexican
investigators believe the kidnappers may have wrongly believed the
Americans were rival human traffickers, a source close to the
investigation told ABC News.
The two survivors
-- McGee and Williams -- were found Tuesday morning in a wooden house in
the Lagunona area, outside of Matamoros, Mexican officials said.
Williams was shot in both legs while McGee was largely unharmed, family members said.
One
of the deceased was also found inside the house, and the second was
found outside it, a source close to the investigation told ABC News.
During
the three days they were held, the Americans were transferred to
various places, including a medical clinic, in order to create confusion
and avoid rescue efforts, according to the governor of Tamaulipas,
Américo Villarreal.
The two survivors were being treated at a hospital in Brownsville following their rescue.
The bodies of the two Americans killed were repatriated to the U.S. on Thursday.
A
24-year-old suspect arrested earlier this week in connection with the
incident has now been formally indicted on an aggravated kidnapping
charge, the Attorney General's Office of Tamaulipas said on Friday.
The man was allegedly acting as a lookout when authorities finally located the four missing Americans.
The
office also announced a homicide charge in the killing of Arely Pablo,
33, a Mexican bystander who died after being hit by a stray bullet
during the kidnapping.
The alleged cartel
members have been indicted in connection with the kidnapping, the
Tamaulipas attorney general announced Monday.


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