Shortly after Naasón Joaquín García, leader of the La Luz del Mundo church, was sentenced to almost 17 years in prison for pederasty, the other agencies investigating him, the FBI and the Mexican Attorney General's Office (FGR), began the process to obtain all the evidence that California authorities found on his iPhone and other devices, according to Univision News sources.
"We want the images," an official who collaborates in one of the investigations told this medium.
The FBI has him under scrutiny as a result of the complaints made by Sochil Martin, who says he was a sex slave of Naasón Joaquín since he took the scepter of command of the cult in 2014.
The agency also interviewed a Texas teenagerwhom they identify as the victim of sexual abuse recorded by the Mexican pastor himself. Several videos of that incident were on an iPhone and an iPad that were confiscated by the California State Attorney's Office, according to hearings in the Los Angeles Court.
The FBI also participated in the rescue of one of the complainants, 'Jane Doe 5', who was kidnapped by the bodyguards of the church for several days, as she herself recounted at the sentencing hearing on June 8 and also assured state attorney Patricia Fusco a month earlier in court.
“(…) García's people followed her with weapons wherever she went. People on both sides of the border had to help her escape to the United States," Fusco said on May 2.
At the moment, the FBI has not confirmed anything publicly, as it does in other ongoing investigations. Her spokeswoman in Los Angeles, Laura Eimiller, promised to respond to a request for comment made by this medium, but did not send it until the publication of this note.
The FGR, for its part, opened two investigation folders: one for alleged human trafficking that began in the summer of 2019 and another for money laundering, which stems from the complaint made in March 2020 by the Intelligence Unit. Financiera (UIF), according to a Mexican government source.
Spokespersons for the Mexican Prosecutor's Office have also not confirmed whether they have an open case.
In the last three years, the FBI and the FGR have not had access to the evidence that the Californian Prosecutor's Office claims to have found in the devices that seized Naasón Joaquín, his two accomplices and the victims. Most are cell phones. "They didn't want to share any information," the source said.
Both agencies understood that they could request copies of images, text messages and other information that could be used for their investigations, until the criminal process in California was concluded. That happened on June 8, when Judge Ronald Coen sentenced him to 16 years and 8 months in jail, a reduced punishment for pleading guilty to three counts of sexual abuse of minors.