The investigation into the death of Carolina Flores Gómez, the 27-year-old former Miss Teen Universe Baja California, has reached a critical stage where the focus has shifted from the perpetrator to the witnesses. While the baby monitor footage from the Polanco apartment in Mexico City clearly captured the perpetrator—identified as Carolina’s mother-in-law, Erika María “N”—a new level of scrutiny is being applied to the man who stood between them. Alejandro Sánchez Herrera, Carolina’s husband and the son of the suspect, was present during the April 15, 2026, attack. While he is the primary witness for the prosecution, investigators are now “discreetly reviewing” a specific portion of his initial statement. According to sources close to the case, it is a single, five-word phrase uttered with a “trembling voice” that has prompted detectives to reconsider the extent of his psychological or tactical involvement.

THE DELAYED CRY FOR JUSTICE

Alejandro’s conduct following the shooting has been a point of intense public debate. Despite witnessing his mother fire six shots at his wife, he did not contact the authorities immediately. It was not until the following day, nearly 24 hours later, that he filed a formal complaint with the Mexico City Attorney General’s Office. Alejandro has justified this silence by stating he was in a state of shock and was prioritizing the safety of the couple’s eight-month-old son, who was also in the room. He claimed that in the hours following the murder, he was paralyzed by fear of his mother and focused solely on “feeding the baby.”

 

However, the “Five-Word Anomaly” in his statement suggests a more complex emotional state. During his first interview with detectives, when asked why he did not intervene or attempt to disarm Erika María, Alejandro reportedly replied with five words that have since been highlighted in the case file. While the exact phrase is being protected for the integrity of the ongoing trial, forensic linguists suggest the words indicate a “relinquishing of agency”—a moment where his identity as a son overrode his duty as a husband. The “trembling voice” recorded by investigators during this specific admission is being analyzed to determine if it reflects genuine trauma or a subconscious realization of his own inaction.

THE BABY MONITOR RECORDING: A VOCAL WITNESS

The baby monitor footage provides a haunting soundtrack to the tragedy. In the recording, Alejandro can be heard shouting at his mother, asking, “What did you do, Mom?” and “What’s wrong with you?” He is also heard asserting, “She’s my family!”—a statement that prompted the chilling rebuttal from Erika María: “Nothing, she just made me angry. Your family is mine, and she stole from me.”


 

The contrast between his vocal protests on the tape and his subsequent 24-hour silence is what has led the Mexico City Prosecutor’s Office to investigate “inconsistencies.” Detectives are exploring whether Alejandro’s five-word admission reveals a “parental lock”—a psychological state where he felt incapable of opposing his mother, even as she committed a capital crime. If his five words imply that he “could not stop her” because of a pre-existing family hierarchy, it raises the question of whether his inaction constituted a form of complicity under Mexican femicide laws.

THE MOTHER-IN-LAW’S ESCAPE

The investigation has also revealed that Erika María did not flee in a frantic panic. After shooting Carolina as she walked toward the bedroom, Erika reportedly called a taxi and waited several minutes to gather her suitcases before departing. Alejandro’s statement that he “unsuccessfully prevented her escape” is being weighed against this timeline. If she had time to pack and wait for a vehicle, the window for intervention was significantly longer than a few seconds of chaos.

 

The “trembling” five words are currently the focal point of a secondary inquiry into whether Alejandro assisted in his mother’s flight or if he was genuinely incapacitated by the “toxic family dynamics” that the Mexican public has so fiercely condemned. Feminist groups and Carolina’s family, led by her mother Reyna Gómez Molina, have called for a total transparent review of Alejandro’s role. They argue that while he may not have pulled the trigger, his failure to protect Carolina—both during the argument and in the critical hours after—is a betrayal of the highest order.

THE LEGACY OF THE POLANCO APARTMENT

As Erika María “N” remains at large with an active immigration alert, the Polanco apartment stands as a site of a profound failure of protection. The case has sparked a national dialogue about the “impunity rate” for femicide in Mexico and the cultural patterns that allow parents to interfere violently in their children’s lives. The five words Alejandro Sánchez Herrera spoke to the police may eventually be the evidence that decides his own legal fate. For now, they remain a “discreetly reviewed” fragment of a tragedy that took the life of a young mother and a beauty queen who believed she was safe in her own home. The investigation continues to seek the truth hidden behind a trembling voice, looking for the moment where a husband’s duty was lost to a son’s shadow.