Double Injustice
How Mexico’s Criminal Justice System Fails Victims and the Accused in Homicide Investigations

President Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo, who took office in October 2024, inherited an ongoing human rights crisis, rooted in extreme violence by organized crime groups and widespread abuses by police, prosecutors, and soldiers, including torture, arbitrary detention, and extrajudicial killings. The homicide rate is extremely high and more than 115,000 people are considered missing. The criminal justice system is profoundly ineffective at ensuring accountability for criminal violence and abuses by security forces. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers are deployed domestically for law enforcement and to carry out many other government tasks with almost no effective civilian oversight. In September 2024, Congress approved a series of regressive constitutional changes, including an expansion of the military’s role in policing and a sweeping overhaul of the justice system that could severely undermine judicial independence.
How Mexico’s Criminal Justice System Fails Victims and the Accused in Homicide Investigations
Next Administration's Policies Would Worsen US Abuse at the Border
Next Administration's Policies Would Worsen US Abuse at the Border
Full Decision-Making Rights, But Support Implementation Needed
Authorities Should Ensure Access to Care, Wide Dissemination of Legal Protections
To Inform the Working Group's Upcoming Report on the Gendered Dimensions of Care and Support Systems
Should Go Beyond Uruguay’s Model
Aguascalientes Governor Should Veto New Limit on Access to Abortion
Proposals Undermine Judicial Independence, Risk Facilitating Abuses
Evidence Casts Doubt on Military’s Version of Events