No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveCops Nab Alleged Mastermind in Guatemalan Murders

Cops Nab Alleged Mastermind in Guatemalan Murders

GUATEMALA CITY – Guatemalan security forces Jan. 3 arrested a man hitherto known only as “Montaña 3,” a supposed mastermind of last February’s murder of three Salvadoran lawmakers and their driver.

Prosecutor Alvaro Matus said that the arrest was made in La Laguna, a village near the border with El Salvador.

The suspect, whose real name is Carlos Gutierrez, was arrested inside a residence by a group of National Civil Police, or PNC, officers.

“He will be transferred in the coming hours to the capital so he can make a statement before the court that is handling the case,”Matus said.

According to investigators, Gutierrez is believed to be the person who on the day of the murders exchanged close to 100 phone calls with Guatemalan lawmaker Manuel Castillo and other people later arrested in connection with the crimes.

A day before his arrest, a court set aside Castillo’s parliamentary immunity so prosecutors could charge him in the case.

The PNC has issued an arrest warrant for Castillo, but a source in the prosecutor’s office said that the lawmaker may have fled because authorities have “lost track of him.”

Gutierrez and Castillo are believed to be the men who coordinated the kidnapping and subsequent killing of the three Salvadoran deputies to the Central American Parliament and their driver. The charred bodies of legislators Eduardo D’Aubuisson, William Pichinte and Jose Ramon Gonzalez, as well as police officer Gerardo Ramírez, were found Feb. 19, 2007, on a remote section of the highway that links the Guatemalan capital to El Salvador (NT, Feb. 23, 2007).

Prosecutors formed their hypothesis by analyzing telephone calls made between the people linked to the crime. They found that Castillo was in constant contact with Gutierrez and Carlos Amilcar Orellana, one of those accused of carrying out the killings.

Orellana was arrested in May along with four others, including a woman, for his supposed role in the slayings. The detainees, according to the investigation, belonged to a band of drug traffickers that operated in the town of Jalpatagua, near the border with El Salvador.

PNC officers Luis Arturo Herrera Lopez, Jose Adolfo Gutierrez, Marvin Langen Escobar Mendez and Jose Korki López Arreaga were arrested on Feb. 22, 2007, for carrying out the murders, but they were killed behind bars three days later (NT, March 2, 2007).

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Launches Massive Operation Against Drug Cartel

Costa Rican authorities launched a massive crackdown today against the South Caribbean Cartel, marking the largest police operation in the country's history. The Organismo...

Canada Updates Travel Advisory for Costa Rica, Citing Ongoing Crime Concerns

The Canadian government has refreshed its travel guidance for visitors heading to Costa Rica, maintaining a call for high caution because of widespread crime....

Trump Pushes MAGA Agenda in Latin America

In a speech in Riyadh in May, President Donald Trump denounced generations of US interventionism, saying the Middle East was only made worse by...

San José’s Best Neighborhoods For Travelers Per Lonely Planet

Our capital draws attention in a new Lonely Planet guide that points visitors toward its key districts. Writer Sarah Gilbert portrays the city, called...

Honduras Presidential Rivals Accuse Each Other of Electoral Coup Plots

Honduras’s leading presidential candidates, with elections less than a month away, accused each other this weekend of preparing alleged electoral fraud. On Thursday, left-wing...

Costa Rica Bans Tattoos and Makeup in Schools

The Ministry of Public Education (MEP) has rolled out new guidelines that will reshape how students present themselves in public schools across Costa Rica...
Avatar
spot_img
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Rocking Chait
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica