A Mexican mayor, Nancy Nápoles, is currently at the center of a legal controversy involving allegations that she staged her own kidnapping to facilitate a massive embezzlement scheme. Local authorities claim that the mayor of Tenancingo, a city located several hours outside of Mexico City, orchestrated the event to hide the theft of government funds.
According to CBS News, the investigation into this incident has revealed a complex web of deception that allegedly involves Nápoles’ family members. While Nápoles has maintained her innocence, the prosecutor’s office has built a case based on the testimony of three individuals who were arrested for their alleged roles as the kidnappers. The authorities claim that the plan was to disguise the withdrawal of $2 million in government funds as a ransom payment.
Based on the testimony, prosecutors state that armed men forced Nápoles from her car at gunpoint. Allegedly, the captors then threatened to kill Nápoles and her family during her captivity if they didn’t pay “40 million pesos in exchange for her freedom.” Prosecution noted that the captors advised her that if they couldn’t pay the ransom, equivalent to $2.3 million, she would need “to take resources from the local government.”
This alleged scheme was foiled by a Good Samaritan
CBS reported that the entire scheme was disrupted by an unsuspecting witness who saw the mayor being forced into a car and called the police. The police then started a search, which the prosecution alleges forced the mayor to abandon the mission. This intervention launched an investigation where major inconsistencies were found in the Nápoles’ story.
The Straits Times noted that the authorities believe the “false kidnapping” was a deliberate effort by the mayor’s husband and brother-in-law to claim public money that “was already embezzled, creating a justification for the money.” However, as the investigation proceeds, the parties are facing different approaches from the prosecution.
Per CBS, prosecutors have requested that Nápoles provide a testimony on July 9 regarding the “simulation of a kidnapping,” but there are currently no arrest warrants issued for her. Conversely, warrants have been issued for her husband and her brother-in-law, both of whom are currently on the run from authorities.
Nápoles put up a post on Facebook to proclaim her innocence and characterized the accusations as “politicized.” She also stated that she is willing to cooperate with authorities to clarify what happened so “the guilty actors are punished.”
Per the outlet, this situation comes at a difficult time for her political career, as Nápoles belongs to the ruling Morena party of President Claudia Sheinbaum. Sheinbaum has made combating corruption one of the primary pillars of her administration, making this reported scandal a significant point of contention for the ruling party. Shienbaum is also a proponent of systemic change, and her administration recently launched investigations into US agents to who died in Mexico.
CBS also reported that the incident in Tenancingo is not an isolated event regarding the scrutiny of high-level officials in Mexico. The broader political landscape has seen several other significant accusations of criminal activity involving government figures in recent months.
For instance, in April, the United States is reported to have charged the governor of Sinaloa, alongside nine other current and former Mexican officials, with various weapons offenses and drug trafficking. Furthermore, last year, CBS wrote that a mayor from a town in western Mexico was arrested as part of a deeper investigation into a suspected drug cartel training camp. During that probe, authorities reportedly discovered human bones and clothing at the site.
The prosecutors have released images that they claim depict the staged event, attempting to provide visual evidence to support their theory of a faked kidnapping.
Published: Jun 20, 2026 11:45 am