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Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales

Victim of the military dictatorship.

Background

National ID (RUT)7.385.705-8

Case summary

Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales was an Army officer and an agent of the DINA and CNI linked to operational duties involving torture and death during the Chilean dictatorship. His name has been judicially connected to the case of the murder of chemist Eugenio Berríos, and he is identified as a repressor residing in the city of Valdivia.

Automatically generated summary. Please consult the original sources below for verified information.

MemoriaViva[1]

Relatos de los Hechos

Hello, you are performing a very important task by making known the atrocities of these parasites. From Valdivia, in the recently created Los Ríos Region, I am sending you the names of 2 CNI agents who are a married couple; he performed operational duties of torture and death, and she only torture: Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, ID: 7.385.705-8, and Gloria Tamayo Contreras (Martínez?), both residing in the city of Valdivia, Calle Inglaterra #371, Huachocopihue sector.

Hoping that this is useful to you, I bid you an affectionate farewell. Expose all these murderers and thieves.

Source: Received from Memoriaviva on 7-1-2008

Relatos de los Hechos

Six Chilean Army officers, all currently on active duty and all former agents of the Army Intelligence Directorate (DINE), were identified by the Fifth Department of Investigations as those responsible for the disappearance and death in Uruguay in 1995 of Eugenio Berríos Segredo, the former star chemist of the DINA, the feared political police of the Pinochet era.

This was reported yesterday by the Chilean electronic newspaper El Mostrador, which specializes in judicial matters. The fact would reveal that the Army allegedly obstructed justice to prevent him from testifying in 1991 in the case of the 1976 assassination in Washington of the former Chilean socialist foreign minister Orlando Letelier, where Berríos was a key witness to establish the illicit association of the DINA.

The six officers identified by Investigations are Martin Michael Borck Kleim, Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, Carlos Angel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios.

Berríos left Chile in 1991 bound for Uruguay with a false passport and a false history, created for him by the DINA. He was wanted by the Supreme Court for the Letelier case. His testimony would have also allowed, according to El Mostrador, for the uncovering of the secret Project Andrea, which consisted of the creation of chemical weapons for a possible war with Argentina in 1978.

Source: pagina12.com.ar, May 1, 2011

Relatos de los Hechos

The newspaper, which cites a confidential report in the possession of the President of Chile, Ricardo Lagos, revealed in turn the names of the military personnel. They are officers Martin Michael Borck Keim, Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, Carlos Angel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios.

All six were agents of the Army Intelligence Directorate (DINE) and were identified by the Fifth Department of Investigations as the "responsible parties for the disappearance and death" of the former star chemist of the DINA, Eugenio Berríos Sagredo, in Uruguay.

This is established by the report that was delivered on Tuesday to the Sixth Criminal Court of Santiago by high-ranking officers of the Fifth Department of Investigations, where this case is based. As is speculated in Chile, the unexpected turn in the case would reveal that the Army of that country, then commanded by General Pinochet, obstructed the actions of the justice system to prevent Eugenio Berríos from testifying in the Letelier case in 1991, where he was the key witness to establish the illicit association of the DINA.

The "police strike" that made the turn in the investigation possible was "fully known by the government," the newspaper adds, in particular by the Undersecretary of the Interior, the Christian Democrat Jorge Burgos.

Identification in Uruguay In reality, the identification of the Chilean military personnel took place in Uruguay last month, in a Montevideo court. A high-ranking officer of the Chilean Investigations, after receiving the broad order to investigate issued last December by the head of the Sixth Criminal Court, Olga Pérez Meza, traveled to Buenos Aires and coordinated with the Interpol OCN of that country to search for the entries and exits of the Chilean Army officers who were suspected of Berríos's death.

Subsequently, the Investigations officer traveled to Uruguay on March 28, 2001, carrying a wide set of photographs of former DINA, CNI, and other DINE agents. Days before that trip, on March 22, a request for proceedings had been sent to Uruguay—where Berríos disappeared—to the judge of Pando, Alvaro González González, who handled the case of Eugenio Berríos's death until it was archived.

González referred the request to Montevideo, since the two witnesses who could recognize the military personnel live in the capital. Subsequently, the aforementioned Investigations officer and another police officer from the Fifth Department moved to the Uruguayan capital, and on April 5, the judge of the 12th Shift Criminal Court of First Instance, José Ferreira Stevenazi, together with the representative of the National Criminal Prosecutor's Office and the public defender on duty, summoned the two witnesses.

These witnesses, in a photo recognition procedure, identified the Army officers "without hesitation." The military personnel who were identified are those who allegedly accompanied Berríos for almost the entire year of 1992, when he resided in Montevideo in a building in the Pocitos neighborhood on Calle Buxareo.

Judge González confirmed to LA REPUBLICA the newspaper's version and noted that so far he has not officially received any information that would merit re-examining the case. The magistrate noted that he could only determine the reopening of the file if relevant information were to reach his hands that would allow linking the presence of the Chilean military personnel to the death of Berríos.

Eugenio Berríos Sagredo, a biochemist by profession, escaped from Chile in November 1991 under the identity of Hernán Tulio Paredes Orellana, a person of incredible resemblance to the former DINA agent.

The similarity between the two men reveals, according to the sources consulted for this article, the degree of perfection of Chilean Intelligence in creating so-called HFs or false histories. Berríos's departure from Chile occurred just at the moment he was being sought by the Supreme Court investigating minister, Adolfo Bañados, as a key witness in the Letelier Case, because Berríos worked on the street of Vía Naranja that the DINA had in Lo Curro, where he prepared Sarin gas.

His testimony could have made it possible to uncover the secret Project Andrea, which consisted of the creation of chemical weapons for the possible war with Argentina in 1978, as can be inferred from the same file of the Letelier case.

Berríos's corpse, with two shots to the head, was found in April 1995 on the beach of El Pinar. Berríos worked on the manufacture of the deadly gas and pathogenic products that were to be used to kill opponents, and he conducted his experiments at the Santiago house of the American Michael Townley, one of the executors convicted for the homicide of the former Chilean foreign minister Orlando Letelier.

Last year, former president Eduardo Frei denounced that the death of his father, the former president of the same name, could have been the work of the DINA and specified that Berríos had made a surreptitious visit to the hospital where he died while suffering from a rare viral infection in 1982, when he was recovering from a low-risk surgical operation.

Frei emerged at that time as the natural and most prominent leader among the opponents of Pinochet's de facto regime. His children, Frei Ruiz-Tagle and his sister Carmen, met in Santiago with Uruguayan President Jorge Batlle during an official visit by the Uruguayan leader last year to request new inquiries into the assassination of Berríos.

Source: lr21.com.uy, May 11, 2001

Relatos de los Hechos

The information was published today by the Uruguayan newspaper “El Observador,” and it was indicated that a Chilean police officer had traveled to Uruguay last March and that, with the collaboration of that country's justice system, he had managed to have some witnesses identify the Army officers involved in the death of the DINA chemist.

The Uruguayan prosecutor, Nancy Hagopian, will request the reopening of the case of the former intelligence agent of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA), Eugenio Berríos, who was murdered in Uruguay.

The information was published today in the Uruguayan newspaper El Observador, and according to sources close to the case cited by the local press, this action would be in response to the report from the Fifth Department of the Investigative Police that identifies six Chilean military personnel linked to the case, which was made known by El Mostrador.

In 1998, the Uruguayan justice system archived the case without being able to determine those responsible for the homicide. It was indicated that a Chilean police officer had traveled to Uruguay last March and that, with the collaboration of that country's justice system, he had managed to have some witnesses identify the Chilean Army officers who were supposedly with Berríos when he resided in Montevideo in 1992.

Leal: Army must instruct an investigation Meanwhile, PPD deputy Antonio Leal issued a public summons today to the commander-in-chief of the Army, General Ricardo Izurieta, to instruct an internal investigation aimed at clarifying the death of the chemist of the defunct DINA.

These statements were made regarding the confidential report of the Investigative Police—published by El Mostrador—in which officers Martín Michael Borck Keim, Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, Carlos Angel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios of the institution are linked to the disappearance and subsequent homicide in Uruguay of the former agent in 1993. “If it is proven that indeed, as Investigations points out, this active-duty personnel, many of whom are Army officers, are in active service, they must be immediately discharged from the institution and placed at the disposal of the courts,” the parliamentarian emphasized. The chemist fled Chile in 1991 after being summoned to testify in the trial for the attack that cost the life of former foreign minister Orlando Letelier, which occurred in Washington in 1976. In 1995, Berríos's corpse was found bound and with a bullet wound in the skull on a beach in the Uruguayan resort of El Pinar. However, the death certificate issued by three Uruguayan forensic experts established that the chemist was murdered in 1993.

Source: El Mostrador.cl, May 11, 2001

Six Army officers and non-commissioned officers, all currently on active duty and who were agents of the Army Intelligence Directorate:

Martin Michael Borck Keim, Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, Carlos Ángel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios were identified by the Fifth Department of Investigations as those responsible for the disappearance and death of the former chemist and member of the DINA's Foreign Brigade, Eugenio Berrios Sagredo, in Uruguay.

The case was presented to the Sixth Criminal Court of Santiago by high-ranking officers of the Fifth Department of Investigations. This is demonstrating that the Army has obstructed justice to prevent Eugenio Berrios from testifying in the Letelier case in 1991, where he was the key witness to establish the illicit association of the DINA.

Until November 1991, the head of the Army Intelligence Directorate was General Hernán Ramírez Rurange, prosecuted as a cover-up in the crime of the union leader Tucapel Jiménez, and he was replaced in December of the same year by General Eugenio Covarrubias.

This information was fully known by the Concertación government. In particular by the Undersecretary of the Interior, the Christian Democrat Jorge Burgos.

Source: El Mostrador, May 2001

Active-duty Colonel Martín Borck Keim was a CNI agent

Army chief defends Colonel Borck

The current executive secretary of the Demining Commission that operates with the Ministry of Defense, active-duty Colonel Martín Borck Keim, was a CNI agent and appears as such with the number 53 on the list that the Army Audit Office delivered to Judge Sergio Muñoz when he investigated the assassination of the union leader, Tucapel Jiménez.

When asked yesterday if General Oscar Izurieta did not find this “unpresentable” for the institution and the government, he declared that “if the person is not prosecuted, nor accused, and has no charges, they have the right to work in any activity.

There is no impediment for them to work there.” Izurieta said that “at one stage of the institution that was an assignment, and the officer did not voluntarily ask to go there. There are hundreds of officers who worked in the CNI, and they should not be stigmatized as guilty of a crime for that.” Borck Keim Martin Michael Army Major, DINE, Second Commander of the Puente Alto Engineer Regiment Six Army officers and non-commissioned officers, all currently on active duty and who were agents of the Army Intelligence Directorate: Martin Michael Borck Keim, Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, Carlos Ángel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios, were identified by the Fifth Department of Investigations as those responsible for the disappearance and death of the former chemist and member of the DINA's Foreign Brigade, Eugenio Berrios Sagredo, in Uruguay. The case was presented to the Sixth Criminal Court of Santiago by high-ranking officers of the Fifth Department of Investigations. This is demonstrating that the Army has obstructed justice to prevent Eugenio Berrios from testifying in the Letelier case in 1991, where he was the key witness to establish the illicit association of the DINA. Until November 1991, the head of the Army Intelligence Directorate was General Hernán Ramírez Rurange, prosecuted as a cover-up in the crime of the union leader Tucapel Jiménez, and he was replaced in December of the same year by General Eugenio Covarrubias. This information was fully known by the Concertación government. In particular by the Undersecretary of the Interior, the Christian Democrat Jorge Burgos. ELMOSTRADOR May 2001 May 17, 2001 Decision of Magistrate Olga Pérez Two officers linked to the Berríos case freed for lack of evidence Martin Michael Borck Keim and Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic had been identified in an Investigative Police report as those responsible for the disappearance and death of the former star chemist of the DINA, Eugenio Berríos Sagredo, in Uruguay. The head of the Sixth Criminal Court, Olga Pérez Meza, released Army officers Martin Michael Borck Keim and Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic for lack of evidence, whom an Investigative Police report indicated as those responsible for the disappearance and death of the former star chemist of the DINA, Eugenio Berríos Sagredo, in Uruguay. The officers had been interrogated by the magistrate last Tuesday, after the lawyer Marcelo Cibié Sr. informed the magistrate of the officers' intention to appear in court to testify as soon as she ordered it, to prove their absolute innocence. The third client of Cibié also testified before the magistrate, non-commissioned officer Carlos Angel Espinoza López, who also appears mentioned in the investigations report that was also brought to the attention of the Undersecretary of the Interior, Jorge Burgos. Sources close to the case assured El Mostrador.cl that in their statements, along with denying any participation in Berríos's departure, they acknowledged having belonged to the CNI and others to the DINA. One of the non-commissioned officers, whose identity remains reserved because he is on active duty, claimed to have been a bodyguard for the well-known showgirl Maripepa Nieto, when she was the "girlfriend" of the former CNI operational chief, Alvaro Corbalán. In legal terms, the officers and non-commissioned officers had to demonstrate an impeccable conduct. Their efforts were good, as they presented even diplomas from competitions at the school, as well as other documents that are outside the military sphere. El Mostrador.Cl May 11, 2001 Uruguayan prosecutor asks to reopen the Eugenio Berríos case The information was published today by the Uruguayan newspaper “El Observador,” and it was indicated that a Chilean police officer had traveled to Uruguay last March and that, with the collaboration of that country's justice system, he had managed to have some witnesses identify the Army officers involved in the death of the DINA chemist. The Uruguayan prosecutor, Nancy Hagopian, will request the reopening of the case of the former intelligence agent of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA), Eugenio Berríos, who was murdered in Uruguay. The information was published today in the Uruguayan newspaper El Observador, and according to sources close to the case cited by the local press, this action would be in response to the report from the Fifth Department of the Investigative Police that identifies six Chilean military personnel linked to the case, which was made known by El Mostrador. In 1998, the Uruguayan justice system archived the case without being able to determine those responsible for the homicide. It was indicated that a Chilean police officer had traveled to Uruguay last March and that, with the collaboration of that country's justice system, he had managed to have some witnesses identify the Chilean Army officers who were supposedly with Berríos when he resided in Montevideo in 1992. Leal: Army must instruct an investigation Meanwhile, PPD deputy Antonio Leal issued a public summons today to the commander-in-chief of the Army, General Ricardo Izurieta, to instruct an internal investigation aimed at clarifying the death of the chemist of the defunct DINA. These statements were made regarding the confidential report of the Investigative Police—published by El Mostrador—in which officers Martin Michael Borck Keim, Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, Carlos Angel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios of the institution are linked to the disappearance and subsequent homicide in Uruguay of the former agent in 1993. «If it is proven that indeed, as Investigations points out, this active-duty personnel, many of whom are Army officers, are in active service, they must be immediately discharged from the institution and placed at the disposal of the courts», the parliamentarian emphasized. The chemist fled Chile in 1991 after being summoned to testify in the trial for the attack that cost the life of former foreign minister Orlando Letelier, which occurred in Washington in 1976. In 1995, Berríos's corpse was found bound and with a bullet wound in the skull on a beach in the Uruguayan resort of El Pinar. However, the death certificate issued by three Uruguayan forensic experts established that the chemist was murdered in 1993. El Mostrador.cl

Source: unexpp.cl, June 28, 2007

Two military personnel arrested for the Berríos crime

Retired officers Arturo Silva Valdés and Raúl Lillo Gutiérrez were interrogated by the magistrate for the assassination of the former DINA (National Intelligence Directorate) chemist, Eugenio Berríos Sagredo, which occurred in mid-1993, and they remain at the Army Telecommunications Command in the La Reina commune, east of Santiago.

Ten days ago, the judge asked the Court of Appeals for authorization to travel to Uruguay and collect the background information on the Berríos crime, whose corpse, tied up and with two shots to the head, was found in April 1995 on El Pinar beach, 28 km east of Montevideo.

The forensic reports released by the Uruguayan authorities indicated that Berríos was murdered in mid-1993, after having telephoned for help to the Chilean embassy in Uruguay and having reported an attempted kidnapping to officials at a Canelones police station.

Berríos, or "Hermes" as he was identified in the underworld of intelligence, arrived clandestinely in Uruguay with a false identity, protected by the Army Intelligence Directorate (DINE), evading an investigation into crimes committed by the Pinochet dictatorship.

Berríos, who was the creator of the deadly Sarin gas, fled the country when he was summoned to testify by Supreme Court minister Adolfo Bañados Cuadra for the homicide of former foreign minister Orlando Letelier, perpetrated on September 21, 1976, in Washington.

For the Letelier crime, the top DINA chiefs, retired General Manuel Contreras and Brigadier Pedro Espinoza, were convicted. In the investigation of Berríos's death, six members of the Chilean Army were implicated: colonels Martín Michael Borck Keim and Santiago Gerónimo Caradeux Franulic, and retired non-commissioned officers Carlos Angel Espinoza López, Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales, José Guillermo Montenegro Valenzuela, and Felipe Enrique Cabrera Palacios.

The presence of the group at Berríos's hideout in Montevideo was proven by agents of the Chilean Investigative Police, who during the years 2000 and 2001 carried out inquiries in both countries at the request of the Sixth Criminal Court of Santiago, whose head is Judge Pérez.

Source: lr21.com.uy, August 24, 2020

Document provided by the Army to the Courts of Justice

The following is the complete list of DINA agents, which was provided a few years ago by the Army to the Courts of Justice. The text was kept under lock and key for a long period, but time leaked it to human rights lawyers and a journalist specializing in this subject.

This document, which has never been published in a printed medium, has reached Clarín from the desk of a journalist who has followed multiple cases of human rights violations during the dictatorship. The document, therefore, is completely authentic. It concerns more than a thousand agents, some prosecuted, others convicted, and not a few already deceased.

Contreras Sepulveda Juan Manuel Elissalde Muller Alberto Pantoja Henriquez Jeronimo Luzberto Barria Barria Victor Hugo Carrasco Fuenzalida Jorge Diaz Darrigrandi Eduardo Antonio Espinoza Bravo Pedro Octavio Lopez Navarro Belarmino Lopez Tapia Carlos Jose Luvecce Massera Osvaldo Patricio Manriquez Bravo Cesar Sanchez Marmonti Hugo Hernan Ureta Sire Arturo Ramon Rosas Thomas Tarcisio Rene Acuña Ramos Marco Rolando Blanche Sepulveda Hernan Blumel Mendez Sergio Fernando Briones Morales Aldo Jose Cajal Alvarez Raul Cowell Mancilla Enrique Ferrer Lima Francisco Maximiliano Ferrer Taylor Heriberto Lautaro Figueroa Yañez Juan Pablo Antonio Flores Figueroa Domingo Antonio Haase Mazzei Nelson Edgardo Huber Olivares Gerardo Alejandro Lailhacar Chavez Roberto Emilio Lepe Orellana Jaime Enrique Lizarraga Arias Victor Federico Massone Stagno Enzo Antonio Matus Santos Carlos Raul Morales Salgado Juan Pedro Ojeda Benett German Eduardo Padilla Villen Patricio Vicente Romero Reyes Alvaro Alfonso Salinas Torres Guillermo Humberto Taricco Lavin Hernan Horacio Urrich Gonzalez Gerardo Ernesto Vasquez Chahuan Manuel Abraham Velez Fuenzalida Sergio Rodrigo Zara Holger Jose Octavio Besamat Morales Luis Antonio Calvo Portales Jorge Sepulveda Gutierrez Abel Ricardo Silva Barra Carlos Alberto Acevedo Godoy Hugo Cesar Andrade Gomez Jorge Claudio Arcas Morales Mario Arturo Aro Peigneguy Jorge Carlos Matin Baeza Hernandez Ricardo Baeza Sepulveda Luis Alberto Bustamante Careols Jorge Gabriel Bustamante De la Barra Hernan Jorge Cerda Bozzo Jose Sebastian Chaigneau Sepulveda Federico Cuellar Torres Juan Jose Del Desposito Martinez Alfredo Ricardo Dumay Castro Miguel Alberto Faundez Norambuena Alfonso Fernandez Larios Armando Garces del Pino Roberto Arturo Garcia Covarrubias Jaime Guillermo Garcia Ferlice Jose Gran Lopez Pablo Domingo Guiza Castresana Roberto Angel Gutierrez Garcia Marcelo Cedric Guzman Valenzuela Alvaro David Krassnoff Martchenko Miguel Labayru Martinez Ramiro Labbe Galilea Cristian Lauriani Maturana Fernando Eduardo Maldonado Krumm Victor Alfredo Martinez Labbe Rosauro Medina Aldea Luis Albeto Morales Bonilla Hugo Mosqueira Jarpa Manuel Rolando Palma Vergara Hector Eduardo Peppi Onetto Mariano Perez Meza Hernan Humberto Perez Santillan Manuel Antonio Pinochet Hiriart Augusto III Pooley Etcheberry Juan Guillermo Provis Carrasco Manuel Jorge Quilhot Palma Rene Patricio Reyes Morel Jorge Alberto Riquelme Villagra Jose Juvenal Riveros Valderrama Rene Miguel Saez Saavedra Marco Antonio Sanchez Perez Carlos Ricardo Sanchez Torres Manuel Segundo Sandoval Arancibia Enrique Erasmo Slater Escanilla Enrique Jorge Sovino Maturana Hernan Luis Thieme Bahre Ricardo Walter Tichauer Salcedo Pedro Guillermo Tornero Deramond Fredy Ureta Pernas Ernesto Jose Velasquez Aguila Sergio Nolberto Vicuña Oyarzun Alfredo Guillermo Wenderoth Sanz Sergio Antonio Willeke Floel Cristoph Georg Zambelli Restelli Patricio Ignacio Gallardo Cardenas Daniel Segundo Mejias Mejias Luis Arturo Maldonado Barria Armando Nelson Quintana Salazar Raul Pablo Parra De La Cuadra Hernan Valle Zapata Hernan Acuña Nuñez Sandra Jeannette Baladron Baltierra Claudio Antonio Baron Contreras Maria Angelica Caceres Retamal Nelson Carrasco Santana Virginia Correa Neckelmann Jaime Rodrigo De Sarratea Andrade Manuel Eduardo Harding Quilodran Carlos Guillermo Fernandez Del Campo Fernando Flores Lizana Rogelio Francisco Guareschi Salmeron Irma Nella Larenas Ramirez Anibal Roberto Martinez Barrios Alejandro Joaquin Montero Rojas Aldo Alfonso Pizarro Rodriguez Doris Edith Rodriguez Sepulveda Pedro Ignacio Araya Silva Carlos Roberto Becerra Weir Fernando Marcial Bravo Reyes Marta Calderon Carreño Gladys Castillo Contreras Luis Fernando Lillo Gutierrez Raul Diego Montt Knockaert Manuel Eduardo Vargas Bories Jorge Octavio Carpio Gallardo Raul Nicolas Maringue Vidal Jose Mario Peñaloza Martinez Juan Bautista Angel Videla Guillermo Alfredo Cima Moran Enzo Crisostomo Soto Hector Manuel Escudero Olivares Carlos Mansilla Mansilla Alfonso Marin Vargas Carlos Roman Perez Eduardo Mario Tapia Barraza Carlos Enrique Aguila Andrade Miguel Aqueveque Perez Jose Arcadio Echeverria Inostroza Juan Alfonso Ferrada Ferrada Pedro Mario Gonzalez Cerda Leon Carol Ibarra Rojas Hector Orlando Leiva Leiva Oscar Segundo Matamala Eckardt Tito Samuel Orellana Cartes Juan de Dios Padilla Lagos Berlin Rivera Garrido Jose Gregorio Rodriguez Ramirez Alonso Jose Rojas Jose Abraham Rojas Diaz Jorge Fernando Rubilar Alarcon Isais Pedro Salazar Peñaloza German Saldaña Mendez Luis Alberto San Martin Jimenez Victor Manuel Silva Aguilera Rolando De la Cruz Soto Hernandez Jorge Octavio Taffo Caro Carlos Oscar Urriola Melendez Rene Gilberto Aguayo Espinoza Arnoldo de Jesus Bustamante Lastra Julio Enrique Cabrera Jaramillo Mario Roberto Camilla Leon Juan Oscar Guillermo Carpio Gallardo Guido Sergio Cajal Aguirre Luis Ricardo Cavieres Lopez Otto Concha Alburquerque Manuel Enrique Godoy Pezoa Jose Grimaldo Jimenez Jimenez Guillermo Jorquera Farias Miguel Gustavo Leon Acuña Jose Bernardo Lucero Lobos manuel Ernesto Magna Miranda Enrique Osvaldo Mercado Sepulveda Arturo Monsalve Toloza Juan Pedro Muñoz Rivera Gaston Eliecer Muñoz Rivera Javier Segundo Rodriguez Ogalde Luis Higgenio Rosales Venegas Alfonso Segundo Silva Bañados Carlos Jerry Tejos Diocares Raul Antonio Toro Olivares Lorenzo Omar Urrea Alvarez Fredis Ahumada Despouy Joice Ana Alvarez Cordova Genaro del Transito Alvarez Lucero Manuel Sergio Alvarez Vega Hiro Andrade Marquez Edgardo Arias Diaz Mario Hernan Arriaza Gonzalez Mercedes Luisa Avendaño Sanchez Alejandro Barbaste Silva Camilo Enrique Bermudez Mendez Carlos Justo Betancurt Molina Guillermo Orlando Bravo Flores Hugo Arturo Calderon Soto Cecilia Margarita Cancino Leyton Waldo Cacho Vivanco Nestor Willy Cerda Sagardia Raul Chaji Palacios Alberto Cofre Marquez Jorge Ivan Cordoba Burgos Juan Ivan Cornejo Alvarez Pedro Segundo Cuadra Cuello Hugo Segundo Donoso Machuca Hilda Rosa Eguia Lopez Carlos Alberto Faundez Castro Floridor Antonio Fernandez Labarca Gloria Isabel Fredes Vasquez Jorge Antonio Gallardo Maldonado Mario Idelfonso Galvez Peralta Julio Alfredo Garrido Aguilera Braulio Lizardo Garrido Jara Emerita Miryam Gatica Vasquez Pablo Enrique Gonzalez Bravo Delia Violeta Gonzalez Delgadillo Jose Abdon Gonzalez Gutierrez Jorge Antonio Gonzalez Tobar Adolfo Vicente Guerrero Soto Maria Angelica Gutierrez Cornejo Jose Antonio Gutierrez Montealegre Segundo Herrera Aguilar Benjamin Ismael Herrera Garrido Manuel Augusto Ibarra Silva Maria Esperanza Jimenez Quintana Francisco Leyton Valdenegro Margarita Lucia Lopez Inostroza Carlos Eusebio Magna Astudillo Elisa del Carmen Marambio Valenzuela Irma Isnelda Martinez Faundez Leonel Martinez Guiñez Hugo Martinez Martinez Orfelio Matteo Galleguillos Santiago Alfredo Medina Argote Luis Alberto Mendez Cisternas Jorge Antonio Merino Palma Ponciano Omar Millar Toro Hugo Enrique Miranda Otarola Hipolito Oscar Molina Oñate Hector Rene Molina Reyes Cesar Montecinos Castillo Odilia Isabel Mora Cerda Luis Eduardo Moraga Silva Mario Nolasco Muñoz Contreras Juan Viterbo Norambuena Retamales Carlos Nuñez Fiubla Rafael Oscar Nuñez Elgueta Luis Raul Orellana Ponce Waldo Alberto Ormeño Quijada Aurelio Zenon Pulgar Morales Jose Fernando Orellana Quelopana Humberto Ortega Diaz Sergio Leonardo Osorio Sepulveda Luis Alfonso Palma Moreno Luis Segundo Parra Muñoz Mario Osvaldo Peñailillo Reyes Luis Arnaldo Poblete Vergara manuel Humberto Pueller Caris Jose Manuel Ramos Hernandez Rosa Humilde Reyes Alarcon Hector Erasmo Reyes Contreras Eduardo Ramon Reyes Lagos Eduardo Antonio Rios San Martin Jose Remigio Rondanelli Cordero Orlando Rubio De la Cruz Ana Maria Saldaña Garrido Gabriel Ruberlindo Sepulveda Moreno Carlos Enrique Soto Trigo Humberto Nelson Suazo Saldaña Juan Edmundo Tilleria Cifuentes David Urrea Alvarez Flodys del Carmen Urrutia Ronda Eduardo Valdes Alarcon reginaldo Varela Varela Luis Berrnabe Vega Oyarzun Aladino Trece Villa Salgado Sergio Antonio Villagran Rubio Lucila Villaman Salazar Hugo Enrique Aguila Diaz Miguel Orion Alarcon Silva Omar Aldea Soto Daniel del Carmen Aguilera Dominguez froilan Enrique Alarcon Seron Luis Heriberto Alvarez Ramirez Vicente Amable barria Ibarra Manuel Efrain Barria Lopez Claudio Bernal Albornoz Hevtor Rene Bitterlich Jaramillo Pedro Segundo Blanco Lopez Florencio Angel Caballero Espiñeira Jose Alfredo Caceres lopez Segundo Dionedes Cariman Antillanca Francisco Caro Loyola Roberto Ramon Carpio Vildozo Francisco Alberto Cepeda Barahona Juan de la Cruz Chavez Santibañez Pedro Aroldo Chavez Toro Bernacio Segundo Contreras Castillo Patricio Contreras Pichun Rigoberto Patricio Corales Trincado Emiliano Segundo Cuevas Zurita Pedro Angel Diaz Villablanca Hector Rutilio Ergas Carpinello Jaime Alfonso Escobar Lopez Pedro Enrique Esparza Raniqueo Jose Lautaro Ferrada Beltran Luis Segundo Ferrada Novoa Ricardo Antonio Ferrada Retamales Bernardino Figueroa Valdivia Sergio Enrique Fuentes Torres Jose Enrique Galvez Bravo Fernando Gonzalez Escobar Oscar Eduardo Henriquez Valderrama Manuel Iturra Arriagada Jose Segundo Jofre Nuñez carlos Sergio Labarca Sanhueza carlos Hernan Lagos Cuevas Nelson del Carmen Lagos Isidin Pedro Ernesto Larrain Salinas Hector Raul Lisperguer Rios Juan Alfonso Marin Castro Carlos Martinez Osses Juan Alberto Mendez Ortiz Roberto Alejandro Moraga Carter Ruben del Carmen Moya Flores Luis Manuel Muñoz Rojas Ramon Alvarito Naez Rojas Julio Manuel Nuñez Gallardo Evaristo Segundo Obreque Henriquez Manuel Jesus Ojeda Gallardo Juan Demetrio Olivares Araya Tito Antolin Olivares Donoso Victor Geraldo Ovalle Henriquez Nelson Hernan Palma Venegas Jose Reinaldo Paris Ramos Jaime Humberto Perez Olivares Juan Carlos Pinazo Triviño Oscar Vicente Piña Garrido Juvenal Alfonso Poblete Nuñez Nelson Hugo Portilla Uribe Sigisfredo Rojas Yevenes Mario del Carmen Romero Contreras Luis Alberto Romero Quintuy Francisco Antonio Romero Vasquez Juan de Dios Rubilar Ocampo Jaime Orlando Saavedra Rojas Julio Segundo Salgado Rivera Patricio Enrique Sanchez Miranda Miguel Angel Sandoval Vergara Roberto Antonio Segura Morales Nelson Omar Sepulveda Almonacid Eduardo Antonio Sepulveda Lopez Jaime Rene Silva Abarca Bernardo Tapia Alvarez Osvaldo Ruben Torrejon gatica Orlando Jesus Troncoso Carrillo Nicanor Aliro Troncoso Cofre Juan Guillermo Troncoso Soto Juan Miguel Troncoso Verdugo Luis Enrique Urtubia Alvarez Cirilo del Carmen Valenzuela Ortiz Jose Angel Valladares Duran Camilo Alberto Veliz Gutierrez Alberto Francisco Vera Zamora Silvia Teresa Vergara Bravo Pedro Blas Vial Collao Jorge Hernan Villablanca Pinto Armando Eugenio Wetzel Gareis Medardo Gustavo Zamora Vergara Ricardo Orlando Abdala Cabrera Victor Manuel Aceituno Cajal Oscar Manuel Acosta Vilches Enrique Santiago Acuña Luengo Mario Alberto Aguayo Barra Ricardo Daniel Aguayo Jara Hernan Fidencio Alarcon Celis Sebastian Leonardo Alarcon Guzman Omar Victor Alarcon Romero Hector Ramon Albanecich Norambuena Jaime Antonio Albarran Cardenas Gonzalo Albornoz Olivares Jose Nolberto Alegria Hernandez Jose Luis Alfaro Serrano Carlos Eulogio Aliste Sepulveda Julio Hernan Almonacid Soto Manuel Jesus Alonso Huipillan Marcelino Alvarado Saldivia Ricardo Alvarez Gonzalez Eugenio Segundo Alvarez Igor Aliro Alvercio Alvarez Torres Bernardo Ivan Andrade Figueroa Santiago Edgardo Arancibia Lopez Juan Mario Araneda Araneda Pedro Ariel Aravena Bravo Eliseo Alfredo Aravena Cespedes Jorge Florentino Aravena Peña Jose Roberto Aravena Soto Jorge Antonio Araya Ortiz Luis Aurelio Araya Ramirez Manuel Jesus Arenas Aro Francisco Arenas Fernandez Carlos Enrique Arevalo Gaete Ramon Alfonso Arevalo Torres Juan Bernardino Arias Contreras Francisco Hosman Arratia Salgado Santo Erasmo Arzola Zurita Omar Adan Asenjo Reinoso Rene Humberto Astudillo Flores Luis Antonio Ayala Hormazabal Nabor Humberto Ayala Miranda Victor Fernando Baschmann Campos Justo Eliecer Bahamonde Roman Victor Guillermo Barrera Casanova Juan Cancio Barria Molina Delfin Segundo Barrios Castillo Emilio Valericio Bazignan Lopez Luis Humberto Becerra Acuña Jose Aladin Beltran Figueroa Sergio Elias Bernier Leal Jose Nemesio Billiard Larrañaga Manuel Enrique Bravo Castro Jose Gilberto Bravo Huaiquiñir Segundo Erasmo Bravo Sepulveda Nibaldo Jesus Briceño Pinto German Horacio Bugueño Casanova Sergio Nicolas Burgos Lillo Juan Alberto Bustamante Santos Luis Alejandro Cabrera Muñoz Guillermo Ernesto Cabrera Peña Alejandro Patricio Caceres Caba Carlos Arnoldo Caceres Soto Juan Pablo Calderon Santibañez Pedro Armando Camilo Ahumada Gustavo Adolfo Canales Fernandez Arnoldo Eduardo Canales Millanao Jose Raul Cantero Alarcon Jorge Reinaldo Carcamo Mancilla Jose Ruben Carcamo Pinuer Eduardo Alejandro Cardenas Sagredo Manuel Segundo Carrasco Vega Ruben Eliseo Carrasco Veloso Rigoberto Enrique Carrillo Muñoz Herrnan Alfonso Carrillo Nesbet Renato Francisco Carrillo Santander Luis Fernando Casanova Miranda Jose Manuel Castillo Ascencio Miguel Enrique Catalan Castillo Carlos Gustavo Catalan Valenzuela Hector Manuel Caviedes Leyton Julio Ivan Celis Lagos Clemente Patricio Cereceda Lopez Luis Alberto Cespedes Auladell Miguel Angel Chavez Baeza Eduardo Martin Cid Rodriguez Jose Alfonso Cid Troncoso Reiner Edgardo Cifuentes Astudillo Sergio Cisterna Cofre Carlos Cesar Cofre Leiva Manuel Ramon Collantes Bravo Raul Ernesto Concha Arevalo Ricardo Alfonso Contreras Ramos Claudio Emilio Contreras Rivera Jose Hernan Contreras Rossel Luis Alberto Coñopan Velarde Victor Jose Cornejo Vidal Jose Joaquin Cuevas Muñoz Carlos Hector Delgado Carrasco Hugo Ruben Delgado Muñoz Eduardo Elias Diaz Silva Gustavo Manuel Diocares Mendoza Josue ino Donoso Cerda Ramon Humberto Duran Martinez Raul del Carmen Escandon Vidal Jose Segundo Esparza Lillo delberto Atanasio Espinoza Bravo Luis Hernan Espinoza Fuentes Manuel Melchor Farias Molina Antonio Farias Vasquez Guillermo Fernandez Aguilar Florencio Wladimir Fernandez Benavides Raul Jose Fernandez Inzunza Patricio Fernandez Veas Jose Roberto Ferran martinez Guillermo Jesus Figueroa Lobos Mauricio Eugenio Figueroa Ruiz Enrique Antonio Figueroa Uribe Gabriel del Rosario Flores Espinoza Juan Carlos Gustavo Freddy Muñoz Jorge Ulises Freddy Muñoz Pablo Alex Frias Faust German del Transito Fuentes Ponce Juan Manuel Fuentes Sepulveda Pedro Joel Fuenzalida Riquelme Juan Rodolfo Gajardo Letelier Jorge Vicente Gallardo Alarcon Carlos Alberto Galvez Beroiza Luis Alberto Galvez Navarro Luis Hernan Garcia Cancino Hector Antonio Garcia Sanchez Ricardo Hernan Garrido Encina Miguel Angel Gatica Carrillo Marco Luciano Godoy Diaz Miguel Angel Godoy Rojas Juan Luis Godoy Valenzuela Patricio Conrado Gomez Sepulveda Hector Enrique Gonzalez Fuentes Waldo Enrique Gonzalez Irribarra Jose Gabriel Gonzalez Jofre Ramon Juan Gonzalez Morales Hernando Segundo Gonzalez Peña Jose Antonio Gonzalez Tobar Jose Miguel Gonzalez Tobar Juan Carlos Gonzalez Toro Guillermo Enrique Gonzalez Urriola Guillermo Guerrero Alday Rene Alberto Guerrero Becerra Ricardo del Carmen Guerrero Teran Osvaldo Fernando Guevara Castillo Hernan Alejandro Gutierrez Boilett Ramon Segundo Gutierrez Leal Jaime Enrique Gutierrez Pizarro Manuel Jesus Gutierrez Valdes Pedro Antonio Heredia Rios Miguel Angel Hernandez Aguilera Pedro Esteban Hernandez Buholzer marcelo Jose Hernandez Correa Miguel Angel Hernandez Franco Nelson Edison Hernandez Medina Ramon Abdon Hernandez Ramirez Jorge Manuel Herrera Herrera Juan Felix Herrera Silva Juan Sixto Hon

Source: elclarin.cl, July 8, 2013

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How to cite this record

DondeEstan.cl (2026). Pedro Alejandro Jara Morales. Retrieved on June 4, 2026, from https://dondeestan.cl/record/jara-morales-pedro-alejandro. Original sources: Memoria Viva (https://memoriaviva.com/criminales/jara-morales-pedro-alejandro).