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The police picked up a woman named Josefina
Gutiérrez, a procuress, on suspicion of kidnapping young girls in
the Guanajuato area, and during questioning, she implicated the
two sisters. Police officers searched the sisters' property and
found the bodies of 11 men, 80 women and several fetuses, a total
of over 91.
Investigations revealed the scheme was that
they would recruit prostitutes through help-wanted ads; though the
ads would state the girls would become maids for the two sisters.
Many of the girls were force fed heroin or cocaine. The sisters
killed the prostitutes when they became too ill, damaged by
repeated sexual activity, lost their looks or stopped pleasing the
customers.
They would also kill customers who showed up
with large amounts of cash. When asked for an explanation for the
deaths, one of the sisters reportedly said, "The food didn't agree
with them." Tried in 1964, the González sisters were each
sentenced to 40 years in prison. In prison, Delfina died due to an
accident, and Maria finished her sentence and dropped out of sight
after her release.
Although they are often cited as the killers,
there were two other sisters who helped in their crimes, Carmen
and Maria Luisa. Carmen died in jail due to cancer; Maria Luisa
went mad because she feared that she would be killed by angry
protesters. The sisters were the subject of the 1977 book Las
Muertas by Mexican author Jorge Ibargüengoitia.
Ecperez.blogspot.com
In the first weeks of January 1964, Catalina
Ortega went to the Judicial Police office in Leon, Guanajuato and
told a macabre tale. Visibly shaken, scared and showing signs of
abuse and malnourishment, Ortega told the police officers that in
nearby San Pancho, the Gonzalez sisters held a sort of
concentration camp/ brothel. Thus began the most scandalous and
sordid tale of prostitution and murder, the most shocking in
annals of Mexican crime history.
Delfina, Maria de Jesus, Carmen and Maria Luisa
Gonzalez Valenzuela were born in El Salto de Juanacatlan, Jalisco
in poverty. Their father, Isidro Torres was an abusive and
authoritarian man. He formed a part of the Rural police, during
the Porfirio Diaz days, in charge of riding thru town and making
sure everything was ok. A violent man, who often abused his power,
he shot and killed a man during an argument. When his young
daughters wore makeup or "risque" clothing not to his liking, he
would lock them up in the town jail to teach them a lesson.
After shooting the man and gaining many
enemies, Isidro Torres, his wife Bernardina Valenzuela and their
daughters relocated to the small village of San Francisco del
Rincon, Guanajuato, called San Pancho by the locals. As the
Gonzalez Valenzuela sisters grew older, their constant fear of
poverty made them open up some businesses in town. Together with
some money they had they opened a saloon in San Pancho, and this
bar, although it didnt bring in loads of money, it gave them
enough to eat.
Later on they would venture into prostitution.
The sisters would bribe local officials with money or the sisters
would "bribe" them using their sexual skills. Nevertheless they
opened up clandestine brothels in San Francisco del Rincon,
Purisima del Rincon, and Leon in Guanajuato state other bordellos
in El Salto and San Juan de los Lagos, Jalisco and another one in
San Juan del Rio, Queretaro state, near Mexico City.
Carmen, Delfina and Maria de Jesus "Chuy",
operated the whorehouses in Guanajuato and Jalisco while Maria
Luisa "Eva the Leggy One" ran her bar/brothel near the Mexican
border. The sisters bought a bar in Lagos, Jalisco from a gay man
nicknamed "El Poquianchi" . The nickname was passed on to the
sisters, who were now called Las Poquianchis, a nickname they
hated.
They would prowl the countryside, hitting the
nearby ranches in Guanajuato or venture into rural Jalisco and
Michoacan states and look for the prettiest young girls. They
would offer them jobs in Guadalajara or Leon, as maids or
waitresses. The poor young peasant girls, with dreams of life in
the big city and money, would be happy to oblige. Other times the
Gonzalez sisters, with the help of an Army Captain/Henchman and
Delfina's lover, Hermengildo Zuniga, would simply snatch the young
girls, never to be seen again. In the late 1950's Carmen died due
to cancer.
At their "Guadalajara de Noche" and "Barca de
Oro" Bars, the young girls would be put to work. The prettiest
virgins were saved for later, awaiting patrons with fat wallets,
who would pay top peso for an untouched girls. The others would be
raped, intimidated and showered with ice water as initiation. The
girls would have to buy their clothes and makeup strictly from the
Gonzalez sisters.
The girls, held against their will, never being
allowed to go outside were controlled by the sisters and Zuniga
"The Black Eagle". Delfina's son Ramon Torres "El Tepo" also
served as muscle, keeping the girls in line. For years the sisters
made tons of money selling booze and whores to soldiers,
councilmen, cops and horny villagers.
When one of the girls got pregnant, she would
be beaten and forced to abort, the fetuses dumped in the back
yards of the brothels or buried at the sisters main ranch that
resembled a concentration camp, Loma del Angel. If a girl got too
sick, due to malnourishment or an STD or due to an impromptu
abortion, she would be locked in a room, starved to death or the
other girls would be forced to beat her to death with sticks and
heavy logs. "The Black Eagle" and the sister's chauffeur handled
the bodies, burning them to ashes or burying them in mass graves.
Johns with a lot of cash would also be murdered and their bodies
buried, and their cash stolen.
in 1963, Ramon Torres "El Tepo" got into an
argument with Lagos de Moreno, Jalisco cops and was shot to death
inside one of the Gonzalez' sisters brothel. The police closed
down the place and its said that Delfina, Tepo's mother, in a fit
of rage ordered Hermenegildo Zuniga to track down the cops who
killed her son and kill them on the spot. And kill them he did.
In January 1964, one of the Gonzalez sisters
"whores" managed to escape Loma del Angel through a small opening
in the wall and fled. Zuniga and his cronies searched for Ortega
to kill her but they could not find her throughout the
countryside. Ortega managed to get ahold of her mother and
together they went to the Leon, Guanajuato police to file a
complaint. She was in luck, the cops she talked to were not on the
sinister sister's payroll. They soon got a search and arrest
warrant against Chuy and Delfina Gonzalez and on January 14th,
1964 they raided Loma del Angel ranch.
There the sisters, still dressed in black,
mourning El Tepos death and wearing shawls were herded throughtout
the ranch, while angry villagers gathered outside demanding to
lynch the sisters. Police and reporters found a dozen emaciated
and dirty women at the ranch, locked in a room. As police and
reporters explored the ranch, some of the girls pointed to spots
in the ground and told them thats where they would find "the
bodies".
Angry and shouting obcenities at their new
accusers, the Gonzalez Valenzuela sisters could do nothing but
watch as their chauffeur, also arrested, was forced to dig. There
authorities found decomposed bodies and the bones of at least 91
women, men and fetuses.
Under heavy military guard, the sisters were
taken to a jail San Francisco del Rincon, but seeing as how the
whole town wanted to lynch the women, a judge sent them to squalid
Irapuato City Jail. A week later, Maria Luisa Gonzalez Valenzuela
went to a Mexico City police station and turned herself in,
fearing being lynched. She thought she was immune, a judge had
granted her immunity from the charges her sisters faced but upon
arriving in Irapuato she too was arrested. There began the hectic
interrogation and sensational trial of the century.
Dozens of ex prostitutes accused the sisters of
rape, murder and extortion. The women accused "The Poquianchis" as
the women were dubbed by the media, of dabbling in Satanism,
forcing the women to practice sexual acts on animals, and killing
and torturing dozens of young girls and johns. They accused
Delfina, Maria Luisa and Maria de Jesus of corrupting and bribing
local and state authorities, who were also regulars to the sisters
bars and brothels. The chaotic trial, peppered with insults and
yelling back and forth from the Gonzalez sisters and their
accusers was short and a judge sentenced the 3 sisters to 40 years
in prison.
Delfina Gonzalez Valenzuela, the oldest
"Poquianchi" went mad, fearing she would be murdered in jail. On
October 17, 1968, while she screamed and ranted, workers doing
reparations above her cell in Irapuato jail, looked down to catch
a glimpse of the notorious woman and accidentaly dropped a bucket
of cement on her head, killing her.
Maria Luisa Gonzalez Valenzuela "Eva the Leggy
One" died alone in her cell at Irapuato jail on November 19, 1984.
Her body, already being eaten by rats, was discovered a day later.
Maria de Jesus Gonzalez Valenzuela, the
youngest of the "Poquianchis" was the only one to be freed. It is
unknown why or when she was freed, but legend has it she met a 64
year old man in prison, and once both were outside, they married
and lived their life in obscurity, finally dying of old age in the
mid 1990's.
In 2002, workers clearing land for a new
housing development in Purisima del Rincon, Guanajuato, down the
road from the notorious Loma del Angel ranch, found the remains of
about 20 skeletons in a pit. Authorities said the victims were
probably buried there in the 1950's or 1960's, victims of Las
Poquianchis.
If this is true, it raises the number of
murders past 110 people.
(Authors Note: An aunt of my mothers was one of
the girls duped into working for the infamous Poquianchis. Out of
Guadalajara she was recruited by one of the sisters, either
Delfina or Chuy, I forget, but my mother's aunt had luck. She was
never forced to prostitute herself but she did help around in one
of their seedy bars in Guadalajara. She said the women never
really mistreated her other than not paying her enough for her
work. Its a subject she doesnt really discuss for obvious
reasons).