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Erin Siegal

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Mexico Adoption Bust Reveals Vast Child Trafficking Ring

Posted: 02/29/2012 5:30 pm

A child trafficking ring uncovered by Mexican police in mid-January in Guadalajara, Jalisco, has not only operated since the 1980's, a decade earlier than previously reported, but has also provided hundreds of children to adoptive families in other countries. The story began unraveling on January 9, 2012, after 21-year-old Laura Talamantes Fabiola Carranza was detained by police in Guadalajara. She was accused of allegedly trying to sell her two-year-old son.

This led to the arrest of nine other people who were said to be participating in the same baby trafficking ring. Associated Press writer Olga Rodríguez followed the story closely, reporting on how seven of the children's mothers said they believed they had been allowing their children to be photographed for anti-abortion advertising campaigns. Some of the babies had no birth certificates, Rodríguez reported, and at least one of the mothers was functionally illiterate. Other news reports allege that some birth mothers were paid $188 per week to carry their pregancies to term and then relinquish their children for adoption.

After these particular children had been fraudulently separated from their mothers, they were subsequently offered as adoptable orphans to Irish families. The Irish Times, the Irish Examiner and other publications covered the story extensively, noting that 18 cases of Mexican-Irish adoption are currently under investigation, and that approximately sixty Mexican children have been adopted to Ireland since 2004. Lawyer Carlos Montoya, speaking on behalf of the Irish families ensnared in the scandal, told the Examiner that there were no suspicions of wrongdoing on the part of the adoptive families.

Guadalajara-based attorney Carlos López Valenzuela is one of the people allegedly at the center of the operation. His law firm, López & López Associates, was operated by both López and his son, reported by the Mexican press to be a former state prosecutor. The firm, according to posts signed by Lopez on internet adoption websites and message boards, was "exclusively devoted" to private Mexican adoptions and boasted of "an outstanding track record in delivering healthy children." One of his posts, dated August 2001, claims he "handled over 260 adoptions for Couples of New York area during the past 21 years [sic]," or since 1981.

A History of Child-Buying and Trafficking Allegations

This is not the first time López has been involved in an adoption scandal. In 2003, Lesley Stahl and the CBS TV news magazine 48 Hours produced a story called "Twist of Fate," which followed two Mexican sisters who had been adopted to different American families. The adoption had been arranged by Carlos López. The girls' birth mother claimed she had been "forced to give them up for adoption," alleging that López had refused to return her daughters after she changed her mind. Additionally, she said, records for her daughters had been manufactured. López said he'd done nothing wrong.

In 1990, Belen Zapata of CNN Mexico recently reported, López and three other women were detained on charges of human trafficking stemming from attempts to purchase as-yet unborn children from pregnant women at the Hospital Civil de Guadalajara. At the time, López told authorities he was a representative of the Association of Adoptive Parents of New York.

Indeed, the affiliation between López and American adoptive parents has a long history. As a founding member of the Yahoo email list "Friends and Families of Mexico," a list with a publicly accessible archives dating back to 1999, López posted to a group of almost 200 people with adoption advice, poems about orphans, and business solicitations. His firm was sometimes also referred to as "López Castellanos Asociados." After the terrorist attacks of 9/11, an associate of Lopez posted to the list, asking adoptive parents to email photos to him so that fifty worried Mexican birth mothers would know that their children were all right. The post said that López has been working adoptions for "25 years," which would mean since the mid-1970's.

2012-02-29-photo1.jpg
Screenshot of Carlos López's now-defunct website www.adoptingmexico.com

American Connections

The Guadalajara-based newspaper Reforma/MURAL reported that an American adoption agency in Colorado was also involved with Mexican-Irish adoptions currently beng inevstigated. Without naming the agency, attorney Carlos Montoya said that it had branches in both Tijuana and Guadalajara, and often worked with López.

The only American business approved by the Mexican government to work adoptions from the state of Jalisco is the California-based Across the World Adoptions. Lesley Sigel, executive director of Across the World, says that they've never completed an adoption for a child from Jalisco. The US Department of State statistics show that just twenty-two Mexican children were adopted by Americans in 2011, a decline of 50 percent from 2010.

No "private" adoptions are supposed to take place from Mexico, which, along with the United States and Ireland, has ratified the Hague Convention on Intercountry Adoption, a treaty that outlines good practices and child welfare protection during international adoption processes. The Mexican government has repeatedly stated that the only way to adopt Mexican children is through a public, state-regulated system.

The federal authority that oversees adoptions, Mexico's Consejo Estatal de Familia, has denied any involvement in the Irish families adoptions, implying that they may have been private.

According to American adoptive parents, Carlos López used to work with American facilitator Ibbie White, who in turn worked with US agencies Universal Family Services (UFS) in California and later, the Denver, Colorado-based Adoption Alliance. The old UFS website shows that Mexican children were placed with families in the US, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Spain, and Switzerland. The services were advertised as "a unique opportunity to adopt a very young infant" from three different Mexican states.

On January 31, 2012, two weeks after the trafficking ring was busted, Adoption Alliance closed their business. Local Colorado media, including the Denver Post, reported the agency was shuttered due to financial woes related to international adoptions. The agency did not return calls or emails for comment.

In Mexico, Juan Manuel Estrada, director of the nonprofit Fundación de Niños Robados (Foundation for Stolen Children, known by the English acronym FIND), told radio reporter Paola Rojas he believed that around a hundred children from Jalisco had been taken from their mothers, advertised on the internet, and placed with foreign families in illegal adoptions facilitated by the Carlos López and his associate lawyers in the neighboring state of Colima, Héctor Manuel Solís Zamora and Luis Humberto Alcántar.

Mexico: Officials Implicated?

As the investigation unfolds in Mexico, it has reached beyond Jalisco and into neighboring Colima, as well as the state of Aguascalientes. Estrada, of Fundación FIND, has publicly accused Mexican government officials of involvement in the illegal adoptions, posting links and commentary on the organization's Facebook page. He has said that the Jalisco children were brought to Colima and Aguascalientes for case processing.

Aside from the nine individuals arrested, Mexican authorities have also stated that three civil organizations are implicated in the trafficking operation, including SOS Bambinos and Asociacion Vida y Familia (known as VIFAC). A feature article in M Semanal by Julio I. Godínez Hernández reports that the young woman originally arrested for trying to sell her two-year-old, Laura Talamantes Fabiola Carranza, had previously given up another baby in adoption to Irish couple Mark Joseph Buckley Williams and Grainne Mary Fitzgerald Doyle. The child's adoption is reported to have been processed by a Colima judge.

Proceso magazine most recently reported that various nonprofit groups, including Carriolas Vacias y la Fundación de Niños Robados (Empty Strollers and Stolen Children Foundation), have alleged government officials under the PAN leadership of former governor Alberto Cárdenas Jiménez have been implicated in child trafficking for adoption in Jalisco since the 1990's. Specifically, Proceso reports, Fundacion FIND claims that both Pedro Ruiz Higuera, the former social attorney general of Jalisco and Claudia Corona, the executive secretary of the Consejo Estatal de Familia (CEF), knew about the illicit adoptions, yet did nothing.

Currently, the confiscated babies are being held in the Casa Hogar Hospicio Cabañas in Jalisco while the organized crime unit of the Mexican attorney general's office, La Subprocuraduría de Investigacion Especializada en Delincuencia Organizada (SIEDO), continues its investigation.

For more on this case, visit Proceso Magazine online (Spanish); check out the articles here and here from M Semanal magazine, (Spanish) as well as Grupo Formula. For more information on corruption and fraud in international adoption around the world, visit the Schuster Institute for Investigative Journalism's "Fraud and Corruption in International Adoption" page.A version of this piece originally appeared at InsightCrime.

 
 
 

Follow Erin Siegal on Twitter: www.twitter.com/erinsiegal

A child trafficking ring uncovered by Mexican police in mid-January in Guadalajara, Jalisco, has not only operated since the 1980's, a decade earlier than previously reported, but has also provided hu...
A child trafficking ring uncovered by Mexican police in mid-January in Guadalajara, Jalisco, has not only operated since the 1980's, a decade earlier than previously reported, but has also provided hu...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Cayita
I suffer from low BS tolerance
12:44 PM on 03/04/2012
Adopting a baby in the US is nearly impossible. There are plently of children available thorugh the Foster Care system but, and this is what scares most prospective parents, there is no guaranty that the children will stay with you. Imagine falling in love with a child and then having that child taken waya from your because crack head mommy wants another chance or because a distant cousin wants to try to raise the kid. It tales many years for parental right to be terminated and therefore the only adoptable children tend to be 8 year-old or more.

So if you want a baby you are basically forced into a private adoption, which is very expensive. Foreign adoptions are cheaper and the waiting time is shorter. Best of all, you have that almost certainty that the birht mother will not show up at your door down the road.

Very likely, the parents do not know who the agency gets the babies. Very likely, the birth mothers know that are giving their babies away (no body is snatching them). What they do not know is the psychological impact of that decision. Very likely they had not and will not receive counseling. They are not being paid to get pregnant. They are being supported while pregnant. They are scared and they change their mind too late.

It is a sad situation for both the biological and the adoptive parents. The only eveil ones here are the baby brokers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
10:10 AM on 03/03/2012
The U.S. adoption agencies involved are Christian based... naturally.
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07:50 PM on 03/01/2012
I'd like to think that at least these kids were "adopted" by good people who would otherwise not have kids, but I know in my heart and mind, a lot of these kids were purchased to exploited.
Those who prey on innocents should have their right to life revoked.
12:24 PM on 03/02/2012
Why do you believe this?

Let's assume you "buy" a 2 year old kid for the purpose of exploiting them. It's going to be 10 years before they can do or be much of anything. Can't you find a better investment?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
heikhali
03:14 PM on 03/01/2012
INS has allowed unnatural numbers of children into the US, all of whom should have been admitted as the children of Mexican immigrants ONLY after DNA testing confirming the truth.
12:22 PM on 03/02/2012
Link to your sources please
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southingtonian
"I'm a Capricorn and you can't make me do sh*t.."
06:56 AM on 03/05/2012
what is the definition of 'unnatural numbers'?
11:34 AM on 03/01/2012
Legalize is the key to fight these drug war. Children trafficking will be decrease enormously. But, government wants to control drugs. What about alcohol which is worsen than drugs.
09:51 AM on 03/01/2012
I really do hope the devil has a great big grill in his backyard for these animals, with a fifty gallon drum of garlic oil and some habenero sauce to splash on while they roll around. Dont rush the flip!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dendog1
09:40 AM on 03/01/2012
The sad thing is Mexico makes it almost impossible to adopt a child. With the US on its border, one would think they could get their act together and figure out how to safely allow adoptions for the thousands of Americans who would adopt.....but NO. The backward Mexican government does not allow it....while thousands of children huddle in orphanages with no hope for a better life. It is a stain on Mexico.
09:30 AM on 03/01/2012
aargh!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ReadMyLipstick1
It can't be that hard.
09:24 AM on 03/01/2012
One cannot ignore the greed and lack of empathy surrounding these people involved in this scam. On a daily and routine basis now we hear of these acts of inhumaness, cruelty and even murder. The reasons seem sometimes so clear: Greed. Poverty. Drugs. And why are the victims generally the children?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
soldier123
Ask not what your country can do for you but what
08:59 AM on 03/01/2012
Child trafficing is big business . What is bigger is the sex slave business. Every year thousands of young girls are enticed with good paying jobs only to become sex slaves to be bought and sold on the market like cattle . These young woman are sent all over the world thinking that a good paying job is waiting for them. When they get to their destination their passport is taken away and raped into submission for a 24 hour period. Within a few days she is doing tricks. This also happens to young American girls too.
08:52 AM on 03/01/2012
$188/week is less than $7,000 over a pregnancy. Legal adoptions of newborns in the US routinely cost 20-50k, some which is paid to the birth mother to cover medical, food, transportation etc. While this agency seems to be engaged in a lot more heinous acts than merely paying pregnant women the practice of paying the birth mother's basic costs during pregnancy is normal, isn't it?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Arturo Ramrez
12:58 AM on 03/02/2012
Some (mostly religious) agencies in Mexico give food, shelter and pay for medical costs for women that get an unwanted pregnancy, but don't want to abort. That's not legal for international adoptions, since that modality is only valid through state agencies.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
08:45 AM on 03/01/2012
If we would grow some balls, and force congress to stop the drug war, we could turn the DEA into an anti human trafficking department, instead. Just think what good we could really do, and FINALLY we would have the real BAD people filling our prison cells.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Czechster
Let the People be Heard
09:35 AM on 03/01/2012
Get serious - the government makes to much money running drugs and controlling the cash flow. Just ask anyone who has worked the DEA. Now the private prison system would cry a river if they did not have a constant supply of clients filling cells from minor drug possession.
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08:37 AM on 03/01/2012
It figures that, as reported in this story, the "Ya Got No Choice" movement would be using these children in its anti-abortion propaganda.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HellBank
Curve: The loveliest distance between two points.
08:36 AM on 03/01/2012
I wonder how many of these kids are bought by Big Corps, maimed and set to assembling cell phones.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Czechster
Let the People be Heard
09:38 AM on 03/01/2012
Hey the GOP and TP considers that a real job. They would move jobs back to the United States if they had access to that cheap labor force.
"BUY an I-Phone and support child labor."
Greed is good.
07:57 AM on 03/01/2012
Here is an example of why this is problematic: checkout the Ohio man who is abusing and pimpingout his "adopted" children.

Www.dailymail.co.uk
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07:55 PM on 03/01/2012
Want a real eye-opener? Go on the Perverted-Justice website. They post names, pics and chat logs from their undercover stings that result in convictions. I recommend not eating beforehand.
The way these people can sexualize children is just.plain.frightening.