At least 4 people involved in killing of Mexico City mayor's senior
aides, police say
[May 22, 2025]
By MARÍA VERZA and FABIOLA SÁNCHEZ
MEXICO CITY (AP) — At least four people were involved in the killing of
the personal secretary and a close adviser of Mexico City ’s Mayor Clara
Brugada, the capital’s police chief said Wednesday, as more details
emerged of the worst attack against public officials in the capital in
recent years.
Pablo Vázquez Camacho said investigators had identified and found a
motorcycle and two other vehicles used in the escape of the gunman who
killed the two officials Tuesday morning as they traveled in a vehicle
along a busy thoroughfare.
Brugada's personal secretary, Ximena Guzmán, and an adviser, José Muñoz,
were shot dead in Guzmán’s car, authorities said.
Mexico City chief prosecutor Bertha Alcalde Luján said the gunman had
fled on a motorcycle that was hidden nearby and then changed vehicles
twice as he and others fled into neighboring Mexico State.
Clothes were recovered in the vehicles and were being analyzed, but
investigators could not yet offer a possible motive, the prosecutor
said.
She said Guzmán was shot eight times and Muñoz four times.
Alcalde said that given the circumstances, investigators believe “it was
a direct attack and with an important degree of planning and those who
killed them had previous experience.”
Still, she said investigators could not yet propose a motive or say who
was behind the killings.

“We cannot conclude that this is tied to organized crime, much less
speak now of a particular organized crime group,” Alcalde said.
Both officials said Wednesday that investigators had detected the
presence of an individual at the site of the attacks days before they
occurred, which would suggest knowledge of the victims' routines.
The attack, which happened at around 7 a.m., left four bullet holes
clustered on the driver’s side of the windshield. One body lay on the
pavement.
Vázquez Camacho said that neither Guzmán nor Muñoz had any special
security measures, but both had received training about protecting
themselves.
“They are people who worked very closely with the people ... and they
did their work without fear,” he said.

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A framed image of Ximena Guzmán, the personal secretary to Mexico
City Mayor Clara Brugada who was murdered a day earlier, adorns an
altar during a wake at a funeral home in Mexico City, Wednesday, May
21, 2025. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

President Claudia Sheinbaum, who is an ally of Brugada and a former
mayor of Mexico City before winning the presidency last year, had
declined to speculate on the possible involvement of organized crime
during her press briefing earlier Wednesday.
At the scene of the attack Wednesday morning, hundreds of commuters
passed with most oblivious to what had occurred a day earlier. Some,
however, noticed the handwritten signs with messages of remembrance
to the two victims and flowers and candles left on the sidewalk.
University student Loretta García Oriz said she had passed the site
Tuesday when Guzmán and Muñoz's bodies were still at the scene.
“Passing here gives me the same trauma,” she said Wednesday.
Oscar Sánchez's taco stand isn't far from the crime scene, but said
Wednesday he didn't know what had happened until another vendor told
him and police began to set up a perimeter. The attack showed that
it doesn't matter if you're an official or an average person, he
said. "It's all the same."
Mexico City's mayor is considered second in political importance
only to the president. The mayor's office has long been a stepping
stone to the presidency, something true for Sheinbaum and her
predecessor.
But for years, the idea has prevailed of Mexico City as a relatively
peaceful oasis protected from the brutal drug cartel violence
prevalent in other parts of the country. There has always been
street crime, but the cartels, while present, maintained a lower
profile in the capital.
That illusion was partially dashed in 2020 with the brazen ambush of
Mexico City's then police chief on another central boulevard. Omar
García Harfuch was wounded, but two bodyguards and a bystander were
killed in the attack involving more than 20 people and heavy
weaponry.
García Harfuch immediately blamed the Jalisco New Generation Cartel.
There had not been another such attack on public officials in the
capital since then.
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