In her new book, "In the Mouth of the Wolf: A Murder, a Cover-Up, and the True Cost of Silencing the Press," Katherine Corcoran digs deep into the killing of Mexican reporter Regina Martinez in April 2012 in the state of Veracruz.
Corcoran investigates who's behind the death of Martinez and what's behind the coverup. At the time of the murder, Corcoran was the Associated Press' bureau chief in Mexico City. Martinez was working on a story about political corruption as a reporter for Proceso, Mexico's top national magazine.
This Q&A has edited and condensed for brevity.
Q: You have been following the case of Regina Martinez literally since the day her body was found. You made countless trips to Xalapa, Veracruz, where Martinez worked and lived. What drove you to write this book?
A: I wanted to bring a wider audience to this issue. It's all these journalists who are being assassinated and nothing happens. If anything, it's just getting worse. At least a dozen have been killed in 2022. And I thought the thing that I can do as a foreign journalist is to bring this to a wider audience in the hopes that something could change.
Q: Give us a profile of a journalist in Mexico. How does Regina fit that profile?
A: Today the profile is a little different from when Regina was killed 10 years ago, They're younger. They're better trained. They really want to dig and be independent. And they work for small digital media. So they make nothing. A good salary for journalists outside of Mexico City is still probably $500 a month. Historically, if they wanted to do independent journalism, they didn't have the support of their media organizations. That has changed because more media organizations want that kind of investigative journalism, but they also don't know how to protect their own people. It's not part of what they consider to be their job. There aren't security protocols. So these reporters are out there pretty much by themselves, doing very dangerous work.
Q: Tell us about Regina.