The night of October 7, 2011 marked the start of a three day ordeal for Mexican singer Gloria Trevi, after she received news that her husband, Armando Gómez, had been kidnapped. Although he recovered his freedom, the nightmare and the trauma that the event caused has not healed.
Just under two years after the kidnapping of Gómez, Texas authorities detained two alleged kidnappers, according to People En Español. The magazine reported that it was in the city of San Antonio, Texas, where a team comprised of FBI and Interpol officers captured two of the possible kidnappers.
Meanwhile, on Univision's HOY show, it was reported that one of the detainees was Lucy Garza, Trevi's acquaintance. Garza's mother was detained along her and was also identified as allegedly responsible and partaker of the kidnapping. Neither Trevi nor her husband have commented on the events through any media, but Poncho De Nigris, who was married to Garza, did.
The Mexican actor and model, who was accused of murdering a transexual person in 2009, declared that he had nothing to do with the kidnapping of 2011, because many began wondering about his possible participation. De Nigris said that after hearing the news he became worried about the daughter he has with Lucy Garza. On his Twitter account, the actor thanked his followers for their messages and expressed his wish of being with his daughter.
"Thank you all for your comments, right now my daughter is what's most important. I await the moment in which she's in my arms forever," he wrote.
Trevi is expected to make a declaration about the detention and to express her opinion after finding out the identity of the detainees.
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