Log in to hire Bénédicte

Bénédicte Desrus

Documentary Photographer + Photojournalist
     
Where the blood goes
Location: Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico
Nationality: French
Biography: Bénédicte Desrus  is a French documentary photographer based in Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico. (In July 2024, she will be based in Mexico City) Her work is distributed by Sipa USA agency in New York. She is a... MORE
Public Story
Where the blood goes
Copyright Bénédicte Desrus 2024
Updated Feb 2021
Location Mexico City
Topics Blood, Crime, Death, Documentary, Essays, Forensic, Forensic cleaner, Latin America, Mexico, Photography, Photojournalism, Violence

WHERE THE BLOOD GOES


Inside the Life of Mexico's Pioneering Forensic Cleaner



Meet Donovan Tavera, Mexico's only government-certified forensic cleaner.


Self-taught, struggling to make ends meet, with a voice made gravelly by tobacco smoke, perennially sporting a suit like the detectives from the noir movies he adores, Tavera is on a mission: to restore dignity and humanity to the dead and their families in a country where only six per cent of all crimes are investigated.


"I come in at the end, after the funeral," he said. "It helps people begin their grieving process." 


But Donovan's career is also microcosm for the Mexico's struggle with impunity, crime, and the rule of law, ten years into a war on organized crime that has left almost 130,000 people dead.


His story communicates the huge loneliness of fighting for decency in a country where victims of crime are treated as scapegoats, meaningless statistics, or fodder for lurid tabloids.


It's a life project that began when he was 12, growing up in the tough neighborhood of Azcapotzalco, Mexico City, after seeing a pedestrian get fatally run over by a car near a taco stand.


"There was blood everywhere. I asked my mother 'Where does all the blood go?" She didn't know. Nobody did. So I decided to find out."


Before even finishing school, he realized there was no formal forensic cleaning training available in the country: so he began to teach himself, poring over books and manuals - not to mention Sherlock Holmes novels - at his local library.


Twenty-five years later, and fifteen years after starting a forensic cleaning company with his family, he has invented almost 400 chemical formulas tailored to all manner of cleanups.  


"Blood is dangerous," says Donovan Tavera, coasting past Mexico City's Angel of Independence late one Sunday night. "People don't know how to clean up murders here. They throw bleach and water on a contaminated surface - which does nothing to kill microbes, tuberculosis, blood-borne diseases."


Text by Tim MacGabhann

LinkedIn Icon Facebook Icon Twitter Icon
3,012

Also by Bénédicte Desrus —

Story

Mestiza de Indias

Bénédicte Desrus / Yucatán, Mexico
Story

Las Amazonas de Yaxunah

Bénédicte Desrus / Yucatán, Mexico
Story

News

Bénédicte Desrus
Story

Publication in NY TID (FINLAND)

Text by Imogen Lepere & Photographs by Bénédicte Desrus
Story

Publication in VOGUE México y Latinoamérica

Text by Imogen Lepere & Photographs by Bénédicte Desrus
Story

CHOO BA'AK • The Mayan bone cleaning ritual in Pomuch, Mexico.

Bénédicte Desrus
Story

Education in indigenous communities during school closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Mexico.

Bénédicte Desrus / Yucatán, Mexico
Story

When I grow up

Bénédicte Desrus / Mexico
Story

Portraits

Bénédicte Desrus / World
Story

Dandora

Bénédicte Desrus / Nairobi, Kenya
Story

Madiaba Busaa Club

Bénédicte Desrus / Nairobi, Kenya
Story

The Women of Casa Xochiquetzal

Bénédicte Desrus / Mexico City
Story

Dreaming big

Bénédicte Desrus / Mexico City
Story

Keep Moving

Bénédicte Desrus / Mexico City
Story

Globesity

Bénédicte Desrus / World
Story

The persecution of homosexuals in Uganda

Bénédicte Desrus / Kampala, Uganda
Story

The devastation caused by injecting foreign substances for cosmetic purposes into the body in Mexico.

Bénédicte Desrus / Mexico City
Where the blood goes by Bénédicte Desrus
Sign-up for
For more access