UT Student Mark Kilroy’s Horrible Murder Recalled After Recent Mexico Killings

Graphic Crime Content Warning

When Mexican authorities found the bodies of nine missing people alongside of a Mexico highway recently, they  reportedly recovered a bag with eight pairs of hands.

Mark James Kilroy

When I heard this news, my mind immediately went back to the horror of Mark Kilroy.

March 14, 2025, marks 36 years since the kidnapping and gruesome murder of Kilroy, a University of Texas, Austin student, while in Matamoros, Mexico, just across the border of Brownsville, Texas.

His life was cut short on March 14, 1989 when he was in his junior year studying pre-med. He went on spring break with three friends to South Padre Island and Matamoros.

On their second night out partying, Kilroy excused himself from the others to go relieve himself.

“That three or four minute tops is when a truck pulled up, grabbed Mark and took off,” his friend Ryan Fenley noted. “It was a Mexican drug smuggling satanic cult, and they were looking for a white spring breaker that particular night, and Mark was at the wrong place at the wrong time. They took him to a ranch right outside of Matamoros, which is owned by a cartel, and pretty much slaughtered him.”

It took a month for police to find his mutilated body. Buried among 14 others at the ranch, he had been raped and dismembered by a group of Satanic drug-traffickers. His legs were hacked off with a machete, while his spine was removed — and his brains were found boiled in a cauldron.

Victims had either been burned, shot, or hacked to death with a machete. Some, including Kilroy, had their hearts torn out. Many were missing ears or eyes.

The group was controlled by Adolfo de Jesús Constanzo as “El Padrino,” The Godfather. Among them was a tall, pretty college student named Sara Aldrete, who would become his second in command and was known as “La Madrina,” The Godmother. 

Aldrete & Constanzo

Over the years, I have traveled to Mexico with no  issues over 150 times, mostly for business or reporting in Monterey, Mexico City, Saltillo and and at least six border towns (Nuevo Progreso, Reynosa, Nuevo Laredo, Piedras Negras, Ciudad Aćuna, and Tijuana) For vacations, I enjoyed Cancun, Cozumel, Cabo San Lucas, Playa del Carmen, Tulum and others.

Note: My son, Mark Dennis, between movies (Hollywood director and script writer), drove a motorcycle with a girlfriend in the early 2000’s from Boerne, Texas to the bottom tip of South America (Ushaia)–with a trip to Antartica–and a return back to Texas. Upon his return, I asked about any dangers they had along the trip. He laughed, “The only place I felt unsafe was at the Texas-Mexico border.

More recently, the bodies of five men and four women, after a roadtrip to Huatulco, in the state of Oaxaca, Mexico went missing on February 27, 2025.

According to local reports, all nine bodies showed signs of torture and were found dismembered in the municipality of San José Miahuatlán, in Puebla three days after they were reported missing.

Since 2006, Mexico has officially recorded over 350,000 murders, with a disappearance epidemic of well over 110,000 Mexicans and migrants missing or found dead with no explanation of their fate for families.

Mexican authorities have been consistently accused of being slow to find disappeared victims due to:

● a lack of resource capacity amid high numbers of cases,

● official collusion with criminal groups or

● a tendency to blame the victims suggesting that they must have been linked to some illicit activity.

In this recent case, the abandoned vehicle where the deceased individuals were discovered was found along with a tarp full of blood stains. Four of the bodies were reportedly found in the vehicle’s trunk, and the bloodied tarp was discovered inside the Volkswagen Vento along with five more bodies.

According to local media reporting, only two of the bodies were able to be identified by authorities via their ID cards: Angie Lizeth Perez Garcia, 29 years old, and 21-year-old Lesly Noya Trejo.

Others reported missing include Brenda Mariel N., Jacqueline Ailet N., Noemi Yamileth N., Raul Emmanuel N., Rubén Antonio N., and Rolando Armando N., according to local reports. One man is still unidentified.

The investigation remains ongoing.

☆☆☆☆☆

To receive free email notification when we post new articles like this, sign up below. Clever Journeys does & will not sell or share your information with anyone.

☆☆☆☆☆

IN GOD WE TRUST

Thanks for supporting independent true journalism with a small tip. Dodie & Jack

CLICK HERE for GREEN PASTURE BENEFITS

Use Code CLEVER10 for a 10% discount on Green Pasture products today!

CLICK HERE for GOOD HEALTH!

GREENPASTURE.ORG

CINDY LEAL MASSEY, TEXAS AUTHOR

Now Available CLICK Here!

CleverJourneys is on Gab.com

4 comments

  1. The same demons that ran the blood sacrifice cults (Aztecs, Mayans, Toltecs?) when the Spaniards first went to Mexico are running the drug cartels today. The drug cartels are into blood sacrifice and pharmakeia.

    Four definitions for the Greek pharmakeia:

    1. the use of administering of drugs.

    2. poisoning.

    3. sorcery, magical arts, often found in connection with idolatry and fostered by it.

    4. metaphor. the deceptions and seductions of idolatry.

    G5331 – pharmakeia – Strong’s Greek Lexicon

    Blood sacrifice and pharmakeia defile the land. When the land is defiled with blood and witchcraft, eventually the land vomits.

    Leviticus 18:25: “And the land is defiled: therefore I do visit the iniquity thereof upon it, and the land itself vomiteth out her inhabitants.”

    Liked by 3 people

  2. Your son was skating on almost no ice, Mexico is about as dangerous as any place on earth. I used to go vacation and fish, but no more. Cartels and Satan, kind of rolls of the tongue. I remember the young man and his story, horrible in every way. Always good reporting, Jack.

    Liked by 3 people

Leave a reply to Tim Shey Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.