00:00Welcome to my channel Shadows of History, the four Valenzuela sisters.
00:05A story of terror and horror. The year was 1945.
00:10Prostitution in Mexico was a respectable business. The sisters were untalented.
00:15And uneducated. But they certainly did not lack ambition. With few options.
00:20The Valenzuelas started a business. Rancho El Angel was
00:25a brothel with, you guessed it. The four sisters running it. Business was good.
00:30But the sisters wanted to expand. None of them were attractive and therefore needed
00:35new labor. An advertisement was placed in the local newspapers. Maids were needed.
00:40Free room and board. Plus good wages. Only young females.
00:45The response was excellent. Those who were chosen received free room and board.
00:50But no salary. They had to work as sex slaves. Never go out.
00:55Despite their booming business, the sisters wanted to expand further.
01:00They hired mercenaries to kidnap girls along the U.S. border.
01:04Virgins were set aside.
01:05For special clients who paid higher rates to perform defloration.
01:10More brothels were set up. First one, then another, and another and another.
01:15But the prostitutes never saw a scent for their terrible duties.
01:19They were
01:20They were
01:21all enslaved, forced to take heroin and cocaine. If anyone got sick.
01:25She was killed. Whoever tried to escape was killed. If anyone refused.
01:30If anyone refused to work, she was killed. If someone wasn't popular with the customers,
01:35she was killed. If anyone became pregnant, the fetus was extracted with a hook.
01:40If a complication occurred, the mother was killed. If a client had a lot of money,
01:45he was killed. After nearly a decade, the police captured one of the kidnappers.
01:50One of the kidnapped women spoke out. Police searched the property and found the bodies of eight
01:55women, eleven men, and several fetuses. When asked for an explanation,
02:00one of the sisters reportedly said, the food didn't suit them well. Most of
02:05the bodies weren't even on the property. Police estimated that the total number of deaths
02:10deaths was more than 150 and probably more than 200. And the victims were not
02:15killed humanely. Locked in an isolated room, they would have died of starvation.
02:20Those who were lucky were beaten to death. Tried in 1964.
02:25The Valenzuela sisters were each sentenced to 40 years in prison. One of them died.
02:30died in prison. Her body was dragged out by the guards and fed to the village rats.
02:35Several weeks later, the remaining bones were thrown into a nearby garbage can.
02:40Lessons of Voices
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02:42Complete
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02:43Create
02:44Variable
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02:46Algorithmission
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