Gang accused of killing to sell human fat
LIMA (Reuters) – Peruvian police said on Thursday they had broken up a gang that allegedly killed dozens of people and sold their fat to buyers who used it to make cosmetics.
Four Peruvians were arrested on suspicion of kidnapping, murder and trafficking in human fat.
The group stored the fat it collected in used soda and water bottles, which police showed reporters.
"We have people detained who have declared and stated how they murdered people with the aim being to extract their fat in rudimentary labs and sell it," said Police Commander Angel Toldeo.
In addition to those taken into custody, police said they were searching for others who bought fat from the gang or might have worked with it.
Remains from some of the victims were found at a rural house in the region of Huanuco where the group worked, according police video.
Police said they were investigating 60 disappearances in the area that might be linked to the gang.
The investigation started this month after police heard about a shipment of fat that arrived in Lima by bus from Peru's mountains.
(Reporting by Carlos Valdez and Terry Wade; editing by Todd Eastham)
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from the BBC
Authorities in Peru said that the gang had gone undetected for perhaps 30 years and was believed to be responsible for the murder of at least 60 people, and then selling their fat to foreign traders.
Police have arrested three Peruvian men and a woman, and are hunting for two unnamed Italians suspected of buying the human fat for as much as $15,000 (10,000 euros) a liter to be used in European cosmetics. Seven suspects in total remain at large.
Peruvian police general, Eusebio Felix, said that "those detained have confessed."
Jorge Sanz Quiroz, a prosecutor in the case, said that the two Italians had been identified but that their names could not be released until they were captured. One of the Italians is said to have left for Europe.
Unsolved crimes
Police hope the arrests will help solve the mysterious disappearances of a large number of people, including children, from villages in the central Peruvian provinces of Huanaco and Pasco.
So far, police have found the remains of only one victim, but one of the suspects, 56-year-old Hilario Cudena, is said to have told police he had committed various murders for the gang since he was 20 years old.
Cudena is accused of being part of a "brotherhood," which called itself the "Pishtacos of Huallaga," a reference to a fabled Andean bogeyman, who killed people for their fat.
The gang was uncovered earlier this month when police arrested an individual traveling on a bus to the capital Lima in possession of what laboratory tests showed was 17 liters of human fat, allegedly worth about $255,000 (170,000 euros).
Later, police discovered a supply of fat at the home of another alleged gang member, Elmer Castillejos, in a Huanaco village.
But at least one expert has doubts there is much of a market for illicit human fat.
Julio Castro, head of the Medical College of Peru, said that plastic surgeons extracted fat from patients every day, but it is not sold because it is full of impurities.
Human fat, however, is similar to pig fat and was collected in Europe in past centuries from executed prisoners for cosmetic and medicinal purposes.
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