Despite complaints, the website has not been taken down.
Although the State Attorney General’s Office (FGE) has “resolved” nearly 95% of the criminal complaints filed against the website called “Packs de México,” photos and videos of over 1,300 young women from Yucatán are still being displayed on the site, where “VIP clients” have access to “exclusive material.”
Unfortunately, no complaint has proceeded to criminal court, while photos and/or videos of at least one young woman are uploaded to the website every single day.
Almost six years after its creation, the website has accumulated more than 14 million visits without the specialists from the FGE’s Specialized Cybercrime Unit being able to shut it down.
The site remains operational and boasts a database of approximately 2,500 young women from six Mexican states, as well as women from other states. Of the total number of women—supposedly none of whom are minors—according to the site’s administrators, 1,316 are from Yucatán, representing 52.7 percent.
The site claims to have 550 young women from Quintana Roo; 514 from Campeche; 53 from Tabasco; 31 from Veracruz; 31 from Chiapas; and three foreign women.
Despite complaints, the photos and/or videos remain online, allowing anyone to access and view the content after becoming a “VIP Client” by paying a monthly fee.
As is well known in Yucatán, this problem is not new, but it continues to grow.
Thousands of women have been exposed on digital platforms without their consent, while complaints go nowhere and the sites continue to operate with complete impunity.
This isn’t just a digital issue; it’s a crisis of privacy, justice, and dignity. How long will the authorities wait to put a stop to this?
So far, the Attorney General’s Office (FGE) has not issued any statement on the matter.
Source: https://tuespaciodelsureste.com




