The images show three motorcycles speeding away just moments after the attack
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The crime of Federico Dorcazberro, a 29-year-old Argentine singer and model who was murdered in Mexico City, has added a new and revealing chapter. In recent hours, Mexican journalist Carlos Jiménez released a key video in the investigation: the footage shows how the alleged strikers flee on three motorcycles among the cars at high speed, seconds after Dorcaz was shot.
"On those three motorcycles speeding away, the men who killed the Argentine model and singer escaped. They shot him and fled through the streets of Mexico City," Jiménez wrote on his X account, where the video went viral within minutes.
The Citizen Security Secretariat of Mexico City (SSC) confirmed that the material is already being analyzed by intelligence teams and urban video surveillance cameras, with the aim of identifying those responsible and tracking the escape route. Sources close to the investigation indicated that the suspects had followed the artist from the vicinity of a gym, where he had been training, until they intercepted and shot him.
The news caused a strong impact not only in Mexico, but also in Argentina. Meanwhile, as the investigation progresses, Dorcaz's girlfriend, Venezuelan influencer Mariana Ávila, expressed her grief on social media with messages full of emotion.
"You will always be my favorite person in the whole world. I love you, I love you, I love you and I will always love you," she wrote on her X account. In another post she added: "I don't want to spend another day without you, baby. I'm waiting for your good night message, my love, please come back. You know I was never this strong without you by my side."
La novia del cantante argentino lo despidió con un emotivo mensaje en redes sociales
In his last hours of life, Federico had shared an interview in which he spoke with pride about his career in Mexico. "This is a very generous country with foreigners. I will be grateful to Mexico for my entire life, because without everything that's happening to me here, I wouldn't be advancing so much in my career," he said.
Mariana Ávila shared that excerpt on her social media and wrote: "You loved Mexico with all your being, just as all of us who knew you loved you."