A California man wanted in Mexico in the killings of three women could be linked with the death of a fourth woman, according to a Mexican official, while court records obtained by USA TODAY this week reveal more details about the case.

Bryant Rivera, 30, who is from the Los Angeles suburb of Downey, was arrested by agents with the FBI and the U.S. Marshals Service on July 6 on a femicide charge in the death of Angela Carolina Acosta Flores. She was found strangled in a hotel room in Tijuana last January.

Femicide, a gender-motivated hate crime and homicide, is a specific criminal offense in Mexico and 15 other countries. 

Mexican officials tell The Associated Press that once Rivera is extradited, they plan to present evidence to add charges for the deaths of two more women in Tijuana killed between September 2021 and February 2022.

Investigators are also looking into whether a fourth death may be connected to Rivera, The AP reported.

Rivera’s lawyer, J. Alejandro Barrientos, did not respond to USA TODAY’s requests for comment by Friday.

Here’s what you need to know about the case:

When did the investigation begin?

The investigation began on Jan. 25, 2022, when Mexican authorities were notified about a woman’s body in a room at the Hotel Cascadas in Tijuana, just across the border from California in the state of Baja California. 

Acosta Flores, whose age was not released, had been strangled to death.

The hotel is next to a strip bar called the Hong Kong Gentlemen’s Club, according to court documents filed in federal U.S. court.

Acosta Flores’ mother, whose name was not released, told Mexican authorities her daughter began working there as a dancer in September 2021, and occasionally did some sex work, according to court records.