TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras -- Two bodies believed to belong to Miss Honduras 2014 and her sister have been found buried near the spa where they disappeared six days ago, the Honduras National Police director said Wednesday.
Authorities were awaiting confirmation from forensic officials that the bodies are Maria Jose Alvarado, 19, and her sister, Sofia, 23, said Gen. Ramon Sabillon.
Sabillon said Sofia's boyfriend, Plutarco Ruiz, confessed and led authorities to the bodies buried in a river bank in a mountainous area of Santa Barbara, about 240 miles west of Tegucigalpa.
They were found near La Aguagua spa, where they had gone last week to celebrate Ruiz's birthday.
Both women, who grew up in the area, were shot to death and appeared to have been killed the night they disappeared, Sabillon said.
"They were not very astute about assessing the people around them. They were just friendly," the sisters' mother Teresa Munoz told Televicentro. "They were taken out by people they hadn't known very long."
An accomplice, Aris Maldonado, was also being held. Sabillon said the two men allegedly buried the bodies near the river so they would decompose quickly.
He said Ruiz allegedly shot his girlfriend, Sofia, because she was dancing with another man. After an argument, he pulled out a pistol and fired at Sofia first, then at Alvarado as she tried to flee. Munoz said Ruiz called her the next morning, acting nervous and claiming the young women had left the party in a car with some other people.
Alvarado was crowned Miss Honduras in April and was expected to compete in the Miss World Pageant in London next month. She was supposed to have left for London this week. A pageant representative said Honduras would not compete in the contest this year because of the tragedy.
Honduras, overrun with streets gangs and drug trafficking, has the highest murder rate in the world for a country not in war, with an estimated 95 killings per 100,000 people. It is one of Latin America's poorest countries, and earlier this year was the main source of a surge in unaccompanied minors migrating to the United States, many to escape the violence.
Alvarado had also worked as a model on the game program "El Show X O da Dinero" of television personality and former presidential candidate Salvador Nasrallah. He said he was saddened by the news.
"A lot of girls die this way, but because they're not famous, it doesn't get the attention and the crimes go unpunished," he said. "She was a girl of good principles who fell into a trap, a game with guns, and ended up a victim of a violent system."
In Venezuela, which also suffers from high crime, a former Miss Venezuela and popular soap-opera actress, Monica Speer, was killed during a robbery in January while she was visiting her homeland with her family.
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