IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Women held in Mexico-to-Ireland adoption racket

Mexican investigators have detained seven women and seized ten children in connection with an apparent child-trafficking ring that aimed to supply babies to Irish couples.
/ Source: msnbc.com staff and news service reports

Mexican investigators have detained seven women and seized 10 children in connection with an apparent child-trafficking ring that aimed to supply babies to Irish couples.

On Monday, three women were detained at a ranch in a suburb of Guadalajara who were taking care of a nine-month old boy, a Jalisco state prosecutor's office said in a statement.

Last week, authorities detained four women and seized nine children, all of them between two months and two years of age.

The women told authorities they had been hired as nannies to take care of children in the process of being adopted, prosecutors said.

Police have raided several ranches to look for more evidence in the case, investigators said.

Buy or rent
Prosecutors first opened the investigation last week following the arrest of a 21-year-old woman who was accused by her sister-in-law of trying to sell one of her children and of "renting" the other one.

The woman led authorities to three other women, all in their early 30s, who took part in the "renting" of the babies, and seized nine children, including the 21-year-old woman's two kids. Another seven were seized from Irish couples.

The first woman arrested claimed she had signed a contract with a law firm to allow her child to be photographed in different places in Jalisco state for advertising purposes.

She told investigators that her baby was taken for 15 days and that she received $500 pesos ($36 dollars) per day as payment, prosecutors said.

The other three women reportedly took the child and several others to a hotel in Guadalajara where they met with the Irish couples who believed they were going to adopt them.

The couples then took the children to the nearby town of Ajijic, a lakeside resort popular with American and Canadian retirees, where they were staying while the adoptions were finished.

Lawyers sought
Officials are investigating whether the Irish couples and Mexican mothers were being tricked by the smuggling ring.

The Irish Times reported that foreign affairs department officials were due to travel to Guadalajara to offer consular assistance to Irish couples who were adopting children in the Mexico.

"We will work with them and with the Mexican authorities," Minister for Foreign Affairs Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore told the Times.

The paper said 11 Irish couples had been interviewed by state prosecutors in Mexico.

Narco culture permeates Mexico, leaks across border

Slideshow  32 photos

Narco culture permeates Mexico, leaks across border

2009: Mexico's drug war is also part of a drug culture with roots in music, movies and even religion

Police are also looking for at least two lawyers with the Guadalajara law firm Lopez Lopez y Asociados who were allegedly processing the adoptions in neighboring Colima state.

The lawyers purportedly advertised in local newspaper for expectant mothers who wanted to give their children up for adoption.

Investigator said the foreign couples had been giving $1,200 pesos ($188 dollars) per week to the mothers since pregnancy, and paying for their medical attention.