YouTube Rapper Melted Bodies Of Slain Students In Acid For Cartel: Police

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
His music videos
painted a vivid portrait of street life in Mexico in all of its gritty detail: chained dogs and flashing knives, drug paraphernalia and
boasts of violence
He rapped around a posse of unsmiling men, their shirts off, tattooed, flashing hand signals and glaring - "los casi muertos" he said,
pointing at them with his thumbs: the nearly dead."This is my hell," he rapped.And officials in Mexico said this week that the songs of
Christian Omar Palma Gutierrez, the rapper known as Qba, were more than just a performative fantasy.Gutierrez has been arrested in
connection to the horrific deaths of three film students after investigators said that he confessed to dissolving their bodies in acid as
part of his work with a notorious drug cartel, according to news reports.The murders of the three students, Javier Salomon Aceves Gastelum,
25, and Marco Garcia Francisco Avalos and Jesus Daniel Diaz, both 20, have shocked this country, which is coming off a record year of
violence
The three disappeared while working on a school project in the western state of Jalisco, and officials now say they were killed after
unwittingly filming at a property connected to a rival group to the powerful gang that Gutierrez is believed to have worked for, the Cartel
Jalisco New Generation
One other person has been arrested and six other arrest warrants have been issued.The Associated Press reported that sources close to the
investigation said that Gutierrez worked as a "cook" for the cartel, dissolving corpses in water tanks full of acid, and later disposing of
the liquefied material, for an income of 3,000 pesos a week, about $160
Chief investigator Lizette Torres told the AFP that Gutierrez has participated in three other murders; and prosecutors have been scouring
his videos as part of the investigation
He has confessed to dissolving the students' bodies in acid, news wire reports said.As a rapper, Gutierrez was no basement amateur
His videos, seemingly professionally made, garnered millions of views on YouTube and earned him as much as $300 per month
He was scheduled to perform at a music festival in the border outpost of Tijuana on April 29.But he is now in protective custody in jail
after confessing to the authorities, raising concerns about the danger he faces from the cartel, the AP reported.Gutierrez seemed to
understand the treacherous stakes of the life he lived
In a music video set in a cemetery, he raps about his own death, reckoning with the "very bad" things he's done."If tomorrow I'm not here,"
he sings, "I want to tell you how much I regret all that I did, all that I said
Mom, dad, forgive me, I couldn't escape the darkness."The tragic fate of the students, of the Universidad de Medios Audiovisuales in
Guadalajara, Jalisco's capital, has been met with vociferous protests, in the media and in the streets, and denouncements by public
officials, including President Enrique Pena Nieto
An estimated 12,000 people marched through the streets of Guadalajara on Thursday carrying signs and chanting "Not one more, we want peace!"
and "It's not three, it's all of us."Some, like Luis Cardenas, a columnist for El Universal newspaper said they saw the tragedy reflected in
Gutierrez's life as well, in a country where fears continue about the pull of a ruthless cycle of violence for residents of its poorer
sectors."Omar dissolved like so the film students, with whom, curiously, he might have had things in common," Cardenas wrote in a piece
titled, "The hitman sung, nobody heard.""What would have been his destiny if luck had placed him elsewhere I am sure that his talent would
have brought him very far, he sings well and it's clear that his videos tell a story, like the stories told by those that study film, maybe
other circumstances would have made him a happy man, because precisely that, the unhappiness, that is what Omar masterfully reflects in his
musical work: the bitterness of a canceled future, the life in a hell of which there is no other option but to kill or die.""Sismo" Garduno,
a producer who worked with Gutierrez, who had a young son, told the AP that the rapper "had dreams of growing, of making a living from this,
so his parents wouldn't have to struggle any more so his family could get ahead."Garduno told the AP that American gang styles were popular
among young people in Mexico."My experience in this genre is that a lot of them want to feel very "cholo," Garduno said.Mexico coming off
the deadliest year in its modern history with 25,300 homicides
Jalisco, too, had a record year of violence, with 1,369 murders
The New Generation cartel is considered one of the country's most powerful, turning heads after shooting down an army helicopter, ambushing
police officers and attempting to intimidate a former attorney general by sending him a pig's head.Officials speculated that the students
may have been misidentified as members of a rival gang
As they left an area where they had filmed, their car broke down, and six armed men dressed as law-enforcement officers approached them and
ordered them onto the ground
They students were driven to a house; one was beaten so badly that he died, and officials believe that the other two were executed because
of that
The head of the country's human rights commission, Luis Gonzalez Perez told the AP that "what we have to do is to stop this climate of
violence, because there is the risk that if there are no jobs, no education, if the young people don't have recreational opportunities, well
the drug cartels are going to recruit them.(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is
published from a syndicated feed.)