Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.
Hundreds of people have attended the first funerals for members of a Mormon community in northern Mexico who died in an ambush by gunmen.
Mexican soldiers guarded the entrance to La Mora village as dozens of vehicles with US number plates arrived in a convoy.
The first funerals were for three of the nine victims – Dawna Ray Langford and her two sons, aged 11 and two.
The other victims are expected to be buried later.
Initial investigations by Mexican authorities suggest the attack was a case of mistaken identity by a drugs cartel, but the victims’ families dispute this.