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- <text id=89TT1081>
- <title>
- Apr. 24, 1989: Cult Of The Red-Haired Devil
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 24, 1989 The Rat Race
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 30
- Cult of the Red-Haired Devil
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A drug bust uncovers an evil brew of satanism and murder
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Woodbury/Matamoros
- </p>
- <p> On the bleak, brown plains of Mexico's Rio Grande valley,
- drug smuggling is nearly as common as a coyote's yowl. Thus
- Mexican police were not all that surprised last week when a
- search of a cattle ranch 20 miles outside the town of Matamoros
- turned up 75 lbs. of marijuana. But the investigation took a
- darker turn when the authorities showed the ranch's caretaker a
- photo of Mark Kilroy, 21, a University of Texas senior who had
- vanished a month ago.
- </p>
- <p> Yes, the worker recalled, he had seen Kilroy, and pointed to
- a rust-colored wooden shed 400 yards away. There, under a gray,
- misty sky, the police made a ghastly discovery. In and around
- a corral, they found several makeshift graves; the overpowering
- stench of decaying flesh led to digging that eventually
- uncovered the corpses of 13 males, one as young as 14. Several
- of the victims had been slashed with knives, others bludgeoned
- on the head. One had been hanged, another apparently set afire
- and at least two pumped with bullets. Some had been tortured
- with razor blades or had their hearts ripped out. Nearly all had
- been severely mutilated: ears, nipples and testicles removed,
- the eyes gouged from one victim, the head missing from another.
- </p>
- <p> When officers entered the darkness of the 15-by-25-ft.
- shack, they found a squat iron kettle whose contents suggested
- that more than just a band of ruthless killers had been at
- work. Inside the pot, resting in dried blood, were a charred
- human brain and a roasted turtle. Other containers held a
- witch's brew of human hair, a goat's head and chicken parts.
- After arresting and questioning four suspects, the Mexican
- police pieced together a horrific tale of a voodoo-practicing
- cult of drug smugglers who believed that orgies of human
- sacrifice would win satanic protection for its 2,000-lb.-a-week
- marijuana-running operation to the U.S. "They felt that all the
- killing would draw a protective shield around them," observed
- Texas Attorney General Jim Mattox. "It was religious craziness."
- </p>
- <p> All but two of the victims were apparently plucked at random
- from the countryside surrounding Matamoros. They included
- Kilroy, a premed major who vanished March 14 after a night of
- spring-break revelry in the town's cantinas. At 2 a.m. he was
- lured toward a pickup truck by a thin, scar-faced man who
- offered a ride. Two toughs threw him into the back and sped
- off. Five blocks away, Kilroy attempted to escape, but was
- recaptured and driven to the ranch. There he was gagged and
- blindfolded with heavy gray tape and tossed into the darkened
- shed.
- </p>
- <p> Kilroy's captors brought bread and water, assuring him there
- was no danger. But twelve hours later he was abruptly led
- outside and executed with a machete slash to the back of his
- neck. The man who wielded the weapon, according to Mexican
- police, was the cult's ringleader, Adolfo de Jesus Constanzo,
- 26, a lanky, red-haired Cuban American who grew up in Miami.
- Constanzo, still being sought at week's end, inspired such
- fervent loyalty among his followers that he was known as El
- Padrino, the Godfather.
- </p>
- <p> According to officials, Constanzo commissioned Kilroy's
- abduction by ordering his followers to "go out and bring in an
- Anglo male." Constanzo, who as a youth in South Florida
- reportedly practiced Santeria, the Caribbean voodoo, led the
- crazed rituals that accompanied the bloodletting. In the
- killing field, police found dozens of long candles as well as
- garlic, peppers and scores of half-burned cigars -- the
- accoutrements of an African offshoot of Santeria known as Palo
- Mayombe.
- </p>
- <p> To ingratiate themselves with the devil, the killers boiled
- the brains and hearts of their victims, mixing the concoction
- with leg and arm bones and animal heads. So vicious were the
- devil worshipers that it took two pathologists laboring at a
- Matamoros mortuary almost four days to complete the autopsies.
- Several victims remained unidentified, but at least one other
- young male may have been an American kidnaped from neighboring
- Brownsville, Texas. Besides Constanzo, authorities sought three
- other suspects, including the Godfather's companion, Sara Maria
- Aldrete, 24, a Mexican honor student at Texas Southmost College
- in Brownsville. Searching Aldrete's home in Matamoros, police
- found a blood-spattered altar and candles.
- </p>
- <p> Paraded before reporters in Matamoros, the four already
- under arrest acknowledged the grisly deeds but showed little
- remorse. The shirt of one suspect was pulled back to show a
- series of scars in the form of inverted crosses, an apparent
- sign that he was selected to kill. Later, police dispensed
- their own summary justice. Hauling one of the dopers back to the
- grave site, they forced him to dig in the blazing sun until he
- uncovered the 13th body.
- </p>
- <p> Texas officials credited the discovery of El Padrino's cult
- in part to Mexico City's drug crackdown along the border, but
- that was small comfort to the families of Mark Kilroy and the
- other dead. As relatives of more than 100 missing people
- crowded Matamoros' funeral homes to learn if their loved ones
- were among the victims, whispers of other demonic bands and
- hideous deeds swept the Rio Grande valley. As preposterous as
- the rumors were, they would have sounded far more bizarre a week
- ago, before the tale of El Padrino and his followers became
- known.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-