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Mexican 'serial killer and cannibal', Andrés Mendoza, 72, arrested for 'murdering and dismembering 9 women including his girlfriend' (photos)

  Authorities in Mexico have arrested a suspected 'serial killer cannibal' after they discovered the remains of his 34-year-old missing girlfriend and at least eight other women at his home.   The Attorney General’s Office for the State of Mexico disclosed that the eight other women may have been murdered by Andrés Mendoza, 72, during a 20-year stretch. Imagen Television reported that Mendoza who videotaped the killings of his victims confessed to have eaten their body parts.   Police in the town of Atizapan were conducting a search for Reyna González, a mother of two girls, when they found her dismembered body inside Mendoza’s on Saturday, May 15.  The mother of two was reported missing last Friday after she went to Mendoza’s home at noon to tell him that she was going to end their relationship.    Mendoza did not agree with González’s ending their relationship and reportedly stabbed her inside his home. According to Infobae, Mendoza drove the knife into G...

Thieves steal 6ft bronze crucifix worth £20,000 from church garden of remembrance for the dead

 




A six-foot bronze crucifix worth £20,000 has been stolen from a church garden of remembrance in Newcastle.



According to Daily Mail, thieves took the sculpture from a garden where mourners scattered the ashes of their loved ones outside All Saints Church in Gosforth, Newcastle.   



The crucifix, which was erected in the church's remembrance garden in 1965, was stolen overnight on Thursday, May 13, the report said. 


 








Confirming the incident, Neighbourhood Inspector Harninder Bola, of Northumbria Police said: 'This is a highly sentimental piece of the remembrance garden at All Saints and the church and its congregation are understandably devastated.


 


'The crucifix watched over an area where the ashes of the community's loved ones have been scattered and these thieves have disturbed that area during their raid.


 


'Reputable scrap dealers will not accept this cross and we would ask the thieves to do the right thing and return it to the church and its congregation.'



He said the 'pain and anguish you have caused should not be underestimated', adding 'there is no value in keeping the crucifix'.  


 


The Reverend Canon Andrew Shipton, of All Saints Church, said the theft had caused 'considerable sadness' among his congregation and the wider community.



He said: 'The crucifix was situated in a consecrated area where many ashes are buried. It was a great shock to find that the bronze statue of our Lord had gone and a cause of considerable sadness.'

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