Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos
Victim of the military dictatorship.
Background
Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos
Victim of the military dictatorship.
Case summary
Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos, an Army non-commissioned officer and head of a DINA operational group, was prosecuted by Judge Montiglio alongside other former agents for his participation in Operation Colombo, one of the most significant operations of repression during the Pinochet dictatorship. He is accused of crimes related to 42 victims of said operation.
MemoriaViva[1]
Relatos de los Hechos
According to a statistical report from the Human Rights Department of the Ministry of the Interior, as of September 30, 2009, there were 333 criminal cases open in the courts regarding human rights violations during the dictatorship, involving 1,101 victims, with 768 agents under prosecution, of whom 276 had been convicted, 53 of them with final sentences and serving time in prison.
The maximum number of proceedings was reached in 2004, with 430 cases involving 1,260 victims. The reduction in the number of proceedings to the 330 currently active is explained by trials that have reached their conclusion, whether through a conviction or a temporary or definitive dismissal without finding those responsible.
If one considers that the total number of victims qualified by the Rettig Report and the Reparation Corporation reaches 3,186, it follows that for 39.5% of the victims, there has been some type of judicial proceeding.
The number of 276 convictions within a universe of 768 prosecuted agents implies 35.9%; the 171 agents with convictions handed down since January 1, 2000, represent 22.2%, and the 53 agents serving prison sentences represent 6.9% of the agents and 1.6% of the victims.
These numbers may vary, as there are 46 appeals pending against dismissal or acquittal rulings, and they could potentially increase as a result of the reopening of the Rettig and Valech commissions, as announced by the Government.
Institutions and ranks
The analysis of the institution of origin and the rank of the prosecuted and convicted agents allows for the configuration of profiles and characteristics of what the repression was like during the dictatorship.
In numerical terms, the branch that contributes the most to the list is the Army, with 341 prosecuted or convicted, followed by Carabineros, with 245; the Navy, with 54; the Air Force, with 51; and Investigaciones, with 18, while 53 of those prosecuted are civilians.
By rank, in the Army there are 53 generals or brigadiers (15.5%); 52 colonels (15.2%); 19 lieutenant colonels (5.5%); 23 majors (6.7%); 22 officers with the rank of captain to second lieutenant (6.4%); 128 non-commissioned officers (37.5%); 2 conscripts (0.5%); and 35 civilian employees of the DINA and/or the CNI (10.6%).
Belonging to Carabineros are 6 generals (2.4%), 17 colonels (6.9%), 10 lieutenant colonels (4%); 12 majors (4.8%); 10 captains (4%); 11 officers (4.4%); 178 officers (72.6%); and one civilian employee from Dicomcar.
For the Navy, there are 6 vice admirals or rear admirals (11.1%); 8 captains (14.8%); 6 frigate captains (11.1%); 7 lieutenants and second lieutenants (12.9%); 25 non-commissioned officers (46.2%); and 2 civilian employees (3.7%).
In the Air Force, there are 2 generals (3.9%); 9 colonels (17.6%); 4 group or squadron commanders (7.8%); 3 captains (5.8%); 1 lieutenant (1.9%); 20 non-commissioned officers (39.2%); and 12 civilian employees (23.5%), most of them from the Comando Conjunto.
From Investigaciones, there are 2 commissioners (11.1%); 2 prefects (11.1%); 3 sub-commissioners (16.6%); 3 sub-prefects (16.6%); and 7 inspectors (38.8%).
Of the 53 civilians, 16 belong to Colonia Dignidad (30.1%).
From a gender perspective, the statistics show that the dictatorship's repression had a markedly sexist character, as of the 768 agents prosecuted or convicted, only 23 are women (2.9%), of whom 8 are from the Army (34.7%); 5 from the Navy (21.7%); 4 from the Air Force (17.3%); 3 from Carabineros (13%); and 3 from Colonia Dignidad (13%).
Multiple prosecutions and convictions
As of September 30, 2009, the statistics of the Human Rights Department of the Ministry of the Interior show 3,078 indictments, a figure determined by those agents who have more than one prosecution and/or conviction.
114 agents appear with two proceedings and/or convictions. The number of proceedings or convictions does not always represent the severity of the agent's participation. For example, former Army Colonel Sergio Arredondo González appears in this category.
However, in the case of the Caravan of Death, he is prosecuted as the perpetrator of 55 cases of kidnapping with qualified homicide: 14 in Antofagasta, 13 in Calama, 13 in Copiapó, and 15 in La Serena, and as a co-perpetrator of 20 qualified homicides: 13 in Calama, 3 in Copiapó, and 4 in Cauquenes.
For his participation in the executions at the Quillota Cavalry School, he is sentenced in the second instance to 10 years and one day in prison as the perpetrator of 9 kidnappings with serious injury.
45 agents appear with three proceedings and/or convictions. In this category, the previous caveat also applies, in the sense that the number of proceedings or convictions does not always represent the agent's commitment to human rights violations.
This is the case of Carlos Herrera Jiménez, who, in addition to having served a sentence as the perpetrator of the qualified homicide of Mario Fernández López, is currently serving two life sentences as the perpetrator of the qualified homicide of Tucapel Jiménez Alfaro and Juan Alegría Mundaca.
Fourteen agents appear with four proceedings or convictions. In this category, Luis Arturo Sanhueza Ross stands out, definitively convicted as the perpetrator of a qualified homicide in Operation Albania; prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 5 qualified kidnappings in the case of the five forcibly disappeared persons of September 1987; definitively convicted as a co-perpetrator of qualified homicide in the case of Jécar Neghme; and definitively convicted as the perpetrator of qualified homicide in the execution of Fernando Vergara.
Also, Heriberto del Carmen Acevedo Acevedo, prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 9 qualified kidnappings and as a co-perpetrator of a qualified homicide in the Calle Conferencia case; prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 6 qualified kidnappings in Operation Colombo; prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 6 qualified kidnappings in the disappearance of 13 members of the clandestine leadership of the PC; and prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 3 qualified kidnappings in Operation Condor.
Ten agents have accumulated five proceedings or convictions. Among them, Paul Schafer Schneider, prosecuted as the perpetrator of 1 qualified kidnapping in the disappearance of Alvaro Vallejos Villagrá; accused as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Juan Maino Canales, Antonio Elizondo Ormaechea, and Elizabeth Rekas; prosecuted as the perpetrator of illicit association in Colonia Dignidad; accused as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Pedro Merino Molina; and sentenced in the second instance as the perpetrator of the qualified homicide of Miguel Becerra.
Also, Manuel Andrés Cárevic Cubillos, prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 46 qualified kidnappings in Operation Colombo; prosecuted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Rodolfo González; prosecuted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Nilda and Mario Peña; definitively convicted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Félix de la Jara; and sentenced in the first instance as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnappings of Luis González Mella, Luis Mahuida Esquivel, and Patricio Soto Cerna.
Six agents have six proceedings and/or convictions. Emblematic cases in this category are the Comando Conjunto agents Daniel Luis Guimpert Corvalán, acquitted in the second instance as the perpetrator of the kidnapping of Humberto Fuentes; prosecuted as the perpetrator of 3 qualified kidnappings of Ignacio González and others; convicted as the perpetrator of the homicide of Carlos Contreras Maluje; prosecuted for the qualified kidnapping of Juan Gianelli and others; acquitted in the first instance for the murder of two members of the Comando Conjunto; and prosecuted for the kidnappings of José Weibel and Carlos Sánchez Cornejo. And Otto Trujillo Miranda, accused as the perpetrator of the kidnapping of Víctor Vega; definitively convicted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Héctor Urrutia, resulting in homicide; prosecuted as the perpetrator of qualified kidnapping and as an accomplice to two qualified kidnappings in the disappearance of Ignacio González and others; prosecuted as an accomplice to two kidnappings in the disappearance of Juan Gianelli and others; sentenced in the second instance as an accomplice to the qualified kidnapping of Humberto Fuentes; and prosecuted as the perpetrator of two qualified kidnappings and as the perpetrator of illicit association in the disappearance of Alonso Gahona Chávez and Miguel Angel Rodríguez Gallardo.
Nine agents face seven proceedings or convictions. The best known is Raúl Eduardo Iturriaga Neumann, sentenced in the second instance as the perpetrator of 2 qualified homicides and as the perpetrator of illicit association in the murder of General Carlos Prats and his wife; definitively convicted as a co-perpetrator of the qualified kidnappings of Carlos Carrasco and Fernando Olea; sentenced in the first instance as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnappings of González Mella, Mahuida Esquivel, and Soto Cerna; definitively convicted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of Félix de la Jara; prosecuted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnappings of Nilda and Mario Peña; definitively convicted as the perpetrator of the qualified kidnapping of José San Martín; and prosecuted as a co-perpetrator of 36 qualified kidnappings in Operation Colombo.
Ten agents total eight proceedings and convictions. These are Army non-commissioned officers Pedro Segundo Bitterlich Jaramillo, Orlando Jesús Torrejón Gatica, Carlos Eusebio López Inostroza, and Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos; also Army non-commissioned officer, nurse, and DINA agent Gladys de las Mercedes Calderón Carreño, the woman with the highest number of prosecutions; Carabineros non-commissioned officers José Mario Friz Esparza and Orlando Guillermo Inostroza Lagos; the doctor and medical colonel Vittorio Orvieto Teplitzki; the Investigaciones sub-prefect Eugenio Jesús Fieldhouse Chávez; and Air Force Colonel Juan Francisco Saavedra Loyola.
Appearing with nine proceedings or convictions are Army General Sergio Arellano Stark; Army Colonel Juan Hernán Morales Salgado; Army Lieutenant Colonel David Adolfo Miranda Monardes; Carabineros non-commissioned officer Claudio Enrique Pacheco Fernández; and the civilian agent of the Comando Conjunto, Cesar Luis Palma Ramírez.
The elite of terror
From here on, the dubious elite of human rights violators emerges. Appearing with ten proceedings or convictions are Army Major Alvaro Julio Corbalán Castilla and Air Force General Freddy Enrique Ruiz Bunger.
Army Colonel and DINA agent Carlos José López Tapia and Army Lieutenant Colonel and DINA agent Ricardo Víctor Lawrence Mires face eight proceedings and three convictions.
Army Colonel and DINA agent Rolf Gonzalo Wenderoth Pozo boasts seven convictions and four proceedings.
Eight proceedings and four convictions is the record of Fernando Eduardo Lauriani Maturana, Army Colonel and DINA agent.
Army Lieutenant Colonel and DINA agent Francisco Maximiliano Ferrer Lima accumulates eight convictions and four proceedings.
Gendarmerie Major and DINA agent Orlando José Manzo Durán has two convictions and 12 proceedings.
Twelve convictions and eight proceedings hang over Army non-commissioned officer and DINA agent Basclay Humberto Zapata Reyes.
Ten convictions and 16 proceedings is the balance for Army Brigadier and DINA agent Pedro Espinoza Bravo.
Army Colonel and DINA agent Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, surpassed only by Marcelo Moren Brito and Manuel Contreras, has the impressive mark of 23 convictions and 17 proceedings.
Moren Brito, Army Colonel and DINA agent, totals 25 convictions and 20 proceedings.
The mark of Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda, the czar of repression in Chile, of 37 convictions and 29 proceedings, is world-class both for his rank and the number of cases he faces, as well as for the fact that he has remained in prison since 1994.
Also a world record must be that of Investigating Judge Víctor Montiglio, with the 2,215 indictments he has issued against 134 agents for 55 kidnappings with disappearance in the so-called Operation Colombo.
The same judge has issued 86 indictments in the kidnapping and disappearance of the first clandestine leadership of the PC, known as Calle Conferencia, and 54 indictments in the case of the disappearance of the second clandestine leadership of the PC, known as "Los Trece," and 54 indictments in the so-called Operation Condor.
Also notable for their massiveness are the 141 indictments issued against 21 agents by Investigating Judge Alejandro Solís regarding 77 victims of Villa Grimaldi, among whom are forcibly disappeared, executed, and surviving tortured persons; the 64 indictments issued by judges Juan Guzmán and Víctor Montiglio in the so-called Caravan of Death; and the 35 indictments issued by Judge Mario Carroza against the agents involved in the five disappearances of FPMR members in September 1987.
Exemplary sentences
From the point of view of the forcefulness and exemplary nature of the sanctions, the life sentences handed down by Judge Milton Juica against Miguel Estay Reino, José Florentino Fuentes Castro, Guillermo González Betancourt, Alejandro Sáez Mardones, and Claudio Salazar Fuentes for the "degollados" (throat-slitting) case stand out; the life sentences against Armando Cabrera Aguilar, Alvaro Corbalán Castilla, and Carlos Herrera Jiménez, handed down by Judge Sergio Muñoz for the homicide of Juan Alegría Mundaca; the life sentence handed down by Judge Mario Carroza against Hugo Salas Wenzel for the homicides of the so-called Operation Albania; the two 20-year sentences each for Manuel Contreras and Pedro Espinoza, handed down by Judge Alejandro Solís for the murder of the Prats couple; and the 20-year prison sentence imposed by Judge Mario Carroza on Alvaro Corbalán for his participation in various homicides of Operation Albania.
Mitigating factors and benefits
Conversely, the three years and one day, reduced by the Supreme Court, for 7 agents for the kidnapping and disappearance of Carlos Contreras Maluje stand out for their leniency; the same sentence, with supervised release, against Donato Alejandro López Almarza for the murder of the priest Joan Alsina; and the three years with the benefit of conditional remission of the sentence against 7 agents for the murder of Jécar Neghme.
In general terms, since 2008, the Criminal Chamber of the Supreme Court has been applying the mitigating factor of "half-prescription" (statute of limitations), for which reason no agent has been sentenced since then to terms longer than five years and one day, which in many cases determines the conditional remission of the sentence.
Thus, as of September 30, 2009, only 53 agents were serving prison sentences. That is what the numbers say.
If one considers the high number of proceedings and that progress in terms of investigation and sanction in cases of human rights violations began to be recorded after 2002, it cannot be maintained that impunity persists in Chile.
But if one considers the reduced amount of the sentences, especially those confirmed during 2008 and 2009 as a consequence of mitigating factors and benefits being granted by the Criminal Chamber of the Supreme Court, and the high proportion of victims who have not had an investigation or sanction, that wound inflicted on the national soul is still far from closing.
By Francisco Herreros |
Source: elsiglo.cl, November 6, 2009
Relatos de los Hechos
Among the accused, all retired, are eight colonels and 23 non-commissioned officers of the Army, 40 officers and non-commissioned officers of Carabineros, two former FACH agents, one former Navy agent, and seven former agents of the Investigative Police.
The biggest blow to the repression of Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship was dealt yesterday by Judge Víctor Montiglio, by prosecuting 98 former agents from different branches of the Armed Forces, Carabineros, and Investigaciones for 42 victims of Operation Colombo.
This is the most numerous resolution issued among the nearly 400 cases of human rights violations currently being investigated in the country. It even surpassed the 67 former agents charged by the same Judge Montiglio in 2007 for the crimes of the Brigada Lautaro and its "Grupo Delfín" at the Simón Bolívar barracks.
Among those charged for Colombo are eight Army colonels (Ret.), six of whom had not been prosecuted before in any case. Also declared defendants were 23 Army non-commissioned officers (Ret.), of whom at least 50 percent appear for the first time in these types of cases.
Among these non-commissioned officers is Juvenal Piña, alias "El Elefante," a former agent of the Brigada Lautaro, who was the one who suffocated the clandestine communist leader (1976) Víctor Díaz with a plastic bag over his head, before they injected him with cyanide.
In addition, the magistrate charged 40 former Carabineros officers and non-commissioned officers, among whom are Ricardo Lawrence, Heriberto Acevedo, Claudio Pacheco, and José Mora, all former members of the same Brigade. Among those prosecuted are also former agents who belonged to the Investigative Police. The only civilian (Army) is Juan Suárez.
Of the total list, at least thirteen are already serving sentences for other cases (see list).
As of the closing of this edition, those prosecuted were still being detained to be interned in different places, such as the Peñalolén Military Police Battalion.
Among the 42 victims for whom the judge issued his resolution are María Angélica Andreolli, Miguel Acuña Castillo, Juan Carlos Perelmann Ide, Juan Chacón Olivares, Jorge Müller Silva, Luis Guendelmann Wisniak, Mario Calderón Tapia, and Carmen Bueno Cifuentes.
Operation Colombo and the media
The list of the 119 was published in the magazine Lea (Buenos Aires) and the newspaper O Dia (Brazil) in 1975; this information was also false. Both publications were created by DINA agents.
Operation Colombo was part of Operation Condor and consisted of a setup by the dictatorship to make the population believe that 119 detainees who were forcibly disappeared had clandestinely left for Argentina and died there in clashes with police and Army forces during the phase prior to the 1976 military coup in Argentina.
Some of those names appeared as militants "murdered" in Buenos Aires and its surroundings, with signs on their bodies saying they had been executed by their own comrades as a settling of scores due to internal disputes. However, this also turned out to be a setup.
The list of the 119 was published in the magazine Lea (Buenos Aires) and the newspaper O Dia (Brazil) in 1975; this information was also false. Both publications were created by DINA agents abroad and had only one edition.
In Chile, the pro-dictatorship press such as the newspapers El Mercurio, La Tercera, Las Ultimas Noticias, and La Segunda reproduced the intelligence services' setup. The headline of the evening paper that reported "Exterminated like rats: 59 Chilean MIR members fall in military operation in Argentina" remains in memory. They were part of the list of the 119 disappeared of Colombo.
The former fugitive Raúl Iturriaga, who was one of those in charge of the DINA's foreign department, was the one who first gave clues in Buenos Aires about this operation.
According to the former civilian agent Enrique Arancibia Clavel, convicted in Buenos Aires for the murder of General Carlos Prats and his wife, it was Iturriaga who, at the beginning of 1975, met with him to ask him to prepare what was necessary because "we have to make some dead bodies appear for Operation Colombo."
It was about preparing the appearance of the supposed bodies of Jaime Robotham and Luis Guendelmann as part of the setup.
List of prosecuted persons
Army (all retired)
Víctor Molina Astete (colonel); Sergio Castillo González (col); Eduardo Guerra Guajardo (col); Víctor San Martín Jiménez (col); José Fuentes Torres (col); Manuel Carevic Cubillos (col); Jaime Paris Ramos (col); César Manríquez Bravo (col); Raúl Toro Montes (non-commissioned officer); Eduardo Reyes Lagos (NCO); Orlando Torrejón Gatica (NCO); Osvaldo Tapia Alvarez (NCO.
Committed suicide); Juvenal Piña Garrido (NCO. “El Elefante”); Juan Suárez Delgado (civilian); Nelson Paz Bustamante (NCO); José Aravena Ruiz (NCO); Luis Torres Méndez (NCO); Raúl Soto Pérez (NCO); Jorge Andrade Gómez (NCO); Juan Escobar Valenzuela (NCO); Rolando Concha Rodríguez (NCO); Gustavo Apablaza Meneses (NCO); Hiro Alvarez Vega (NCO); Víctor Alvarez Droguett (NCO); Jorge Venegas Silva (NCO); Carlos Rinaldi Suazo (NCO); Carlos Letelier Verdugo (NCO); Reinaldo Concha Orellana (NCO); Máximo Aliaga Soto (NCO); Hugo Clavería Leiva (NCO); Samuel Fuenzalida Devia (NCO);
Investigaciones Juan Urbina Cáceres; Hugo Hernández; Manuel Rivas Díaz; Herman Alfaro; Eugenio Fieldhouse; Osvaldo Castillo;
Carabineros (officers and non-commissioned officers all retired)
Gerardo Godoy García; Ciro Torres Sáez; Alejandro Molina Cisternas; Camilo Torres Negrier; Héctor Lira Aravena; José Fritz Esparza; Claudio Pacheco Fernández; Jorge Sagardia Monge; Sergio Castro Andrade; Luis Villarroel Gutiérrez; Armando Cofré Gómez; Fernando Roa Montaña; Gerardo Meza Acuña; Enrique Gutiérrez Rubilar; Luis Mora Cerda; José Muñoz Leal; Juan Duarte Gallegos; Carlos Miranda Meza; Rufino Jaime Astorga; Luis Urrutia Acuña; Luis Zúñiga Ovalle; Pedro Alfaro Hernández; Orlando Inostroza Lagos; Rosa Ramos Hernández; Gustavo Caruvan Soto; Héctor Valdebenito Araya; Manuel Avendaño González; José Mora Diocares; Guido Jara Brevis; Nelson Ortiz Vignolo; Ruderlindo Urrutia Jorquera; Héctor Flores Vergara; Jerónimo Neira Méndez; Manuel Montré Méndez; Heriberto del Carmen Acevedo; Claudio Orellana de la Pinta; Nelson Iturriaga Cortés; Luis Gutiérrez Uribe; José Ojeda Obando
Air Force Delia Gajardo Cortés; Hernán Avalos Muñoz
Navy Teresa Navarro Osorio;
Prosecuted persons already serving sentences
Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda; Pedro Espinoza Bravo; Raúl Iturriaga Neumann; Marcelo Moren Brito; Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko; Ricardo Lawrence Mires; Basclay Zapata Reyes; Conrado Pacheco; Francisco Ferrer Lima; Gerardo Urrich; Orlando Manzo Durán; Rizier Altez España; Fernando Lauriani Maturana
Source: lanacion.cl, May 27, 2008
Justice issued new prosecutions against Manuel Contreras for human rights violations
40 years after the Coup d'État, Judge Leopoldo Llanos also charged Carlos López, Pedro Espinoza, among others, as perpetrators of the qualified kidnappings of Juan Villarroel Zárate and Clara Canteros Torres and the qualified homicide of Eduardo Canteros Prado, which occurred in 1976.
The visiting judge of the Santiago Court of Appeals, Leopoldo Llanos, prosecuted former agents of the former National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) for the qualified kidnappings of Juan Aurelio Villarroel Zárate and Clara Canteros Torres and the qualified homicide of Eduardo Canteros Prado, which occurred in July and August 1976.
The magistrate charged as perpetrators Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda; Carlos López Tapia; Pedro Espinoza Bravo; Juan Morales Salgado; Marcelo Moren Brito; Rolf Wenderoth Pozo; Eugenio Fieldhouse Chávez; Ricardo Lawrence Mires; and Jorge Andrade Gómez.
And as accomplices: Gladys Calderón Carreño; Rufino Jaime Astorga; José Friz Esparza; Hermon Alfaro Mundaca; Orlando Inostroza Lagos; Pedro Bitterlich Jaramillo; Claudio Pacheco Fernández; Eduardo Reyes Lagos; Orlando Torrejón Gatica; Orlando Altamirano Sanhueza; and Carlos López Inostroza.
According to the investigation, Juan Villarroel Zárate was forcibly disappeared near the Mapocho station on August 13, 1976. Meanwhile, Clara Carrasco Torres and her uncle Eduardo Canteros Prado were detained in La Florida on July 23, 1976.
Canteros' remains were identified among the victims who were illegally buried on an Army property located in the Las Tórtolas sector, Colina, on July 3rd; these remains were found in 1990.
Source: soychile.cl, August 30, 2013
Justice issued new prosecutions against Manuel Contreras for human rights violations
40 years after the Coup d'État, Judge Leopoldo Llanos also charged Carlos López, Pedro Espinoza, among others, as perpetrators of the qualified kidnappings of Juan Villarroel Zárate and Clara Canteros Torres and the qualified homicide of Eduardo Canteros Prado, which occurred in 1976.
The visiting judge of the Santiago Court of Appeals, Leopoldo Llanos, prosecuted former agents of the former National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) for the qualified kidnappings of Juan Aurelio Villarroel Zárate and Clara Canteros Torres and the qualified homicide of Eduardo Canteros Prado, which occurred in July and August 1976.
The magistrate charged as perpetrators Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda; Carlos López Tapia; Pedro Espinoza Bravo; Juan Morales Salgado; Marcelo Moren Brito; Rolf Wenderoth Pozo; Eugenio Fieldhouse Chávez; Ricardo Lawrence Mires; and Jorge Andrade Gómez.
And as accomplices: Gladys Calderón Carreño; Rufino Jaime Astorga; José Friz Esparza; Hermon Alfaro Mundaca; Orlando Inostroza Lagos; Pedro Bitterlich Jaramillo; Claudio Pacheco Fernández; Eduardo Reyes Lagos; Orlando Torrejón Gatica; Orlando Altamirano Sanhueza; and Carlos López Inostroza.
According to the investigation, Juan Villarroel Zárate was forcibly disappeared near the Mapocho station on August 13, 1976. Meanwhile, Clara Carrasco Torres and her uncle Eduardo Canteros Prado were detained in La Florida on July 23, 1976.
Canteros' remains were identified among the victims who were illegally buried on an Army property located in the Las Tórtolas sector, Colina, on July 3rd; these remains were found in 1990.
Source: Emol.com, August 30, 2013
Calle Conferencia: indictment issued against 79 former DINA members
The visiting minister of the Santiago Court of Appeals, Miguel Vázquez, issued an indictment in the investigation into the aggravated kidnapping of Mario Zamorano Donoso, Jorge Muñoz Poutays, Uldarico Donaire Cortés, Jaime Donato Avendaño, Elisa Escobar Zepeda, Lenin Díaz Silva, and Eliana Espinoza Fernández; and for the aggravated homicide of Víctor Díaz López.
These crimes were perpetrated between May 1976 and January 1977 in Santiago, in a case known as “Conferencia 1.”
Magistrate Vázquez determined the responsibility of 79 former members of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) in the eight crimes committed during various operations carried out at Calle Conferencia 1587, in the commune of Santiago; Calle Gaspar de Orense 993, in the commune of Quinta Normal; Calle Bello Horizonte 979, in the commune of Las Condes; and the homicide at the Simón Bolívar 8800 barracks, in the commune of La Reina.
The case was initiated by a complaint filed on January 12, 1998, and was previously investigated by visiting ministers Juan Guzmán Tapia and Víctor Montiglio Rezzio.
Visiting minister Miguel Vázquez determined the responsibilities—in all or some of the events—of:
01. Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda. 02. Pedro Espinoza Bravo. 03. Carlos López Tapia. 04. Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko. 05. Ricardo Lawrence Mires. 06. Jorge Madariaga Acevedo. 07. Eugenio Fieldhouse Chávez. 08.
José Fuentealba Saldías. 09. Hugo Clavería Leiva. 10. José Soto Torres. 11. Raúl Soto Pérez. 12. Juan Carlos Escobar Valenzuela. 13. Jerónimo Neira Méndez. 14. Héctor Briones Burgos. 15. Pedro Mora Villanueva. 16.
Roberto Rodríguez Manquel. 17. Leonidas Méndez Moreno. 18. Jorge Andrade Gómez. 19. Nelson Herrera Lagos. 20. Juan Morales Salgado. 21. Jorge Sagardía Monje. 22. Héctor Valdebenito Araya. 23. Federico Chaigneau Sepúlveda. 24.
Bernardo Daza Navarro. 25. Sergio Escalona Acuña. 26. Guillermo Ferrán Martínez. 27. Gladys Calderón Carreño. 28. Elisa Magna Astudillo. 29. Heriberto del Carmen Acevedo. 30. Emilio Troncoso Vivallos. 31.
Claudio Pacheco Fernández. 32. Jorge Díaz Radulovich. 33. Orlando Altamirano Sanhueza. 34. Eduardo Cabezas Mardones. 35. Jorge Escobar Fuentes. 36. René Riveros Valderrama. 37. Jorge Pichunmán Curiqueo. 38.
Orfa Saavedra Vásquez. 39. Celinda Aspe Rojas. 40. Teresa Navarro Navarro. 41. Berta Jiménez Escobar. 42. Adriana Rivas González. 43. Jorge Arriagada Mora. 44. Pedro Bitterlich Jaramillo. 45. Eduardo Oyarce Riquelme. 46.
Guillermo Díaz Ramírez. 47. Ana Vilches Muñoz. 48. Italia Vacarella Gilio. 49. Jorge Manríquez Manterola. 50. Orlando Torrejón Gatica. 51. José Manuel Sarmiento Sotelo. 52. Manuel Obreque Henríquez. 53.
Gustavo Guerrero Aguilera. 54. Eduardo Garea Guzmán. 55. Juvenal Piña Garrido. 56. Rufino Jaime Astorga. 57. Luis Lagos Yáñez. 58. María Angélica Guerrero Soto. 59. Sergio Castro Andrade. 60. Manuel Montre Méndez. 61.
Pedro Gutiérrez Valdés. 62. Claudio Orellana de la Pinta. 63. Joyce Ahumada Despouy. 64. Hiro Álvarez Vega. 65. José Miguel Meza Serrano. 66. José Ojeda Obando. 67. Carlos Bermúdez Méndez. 68. Víctor Manuel Álvarez Droguett. 69.
Eduardo Reyes Lagos. 70. Marilin Silva Vergara. 71. Hernán Sovino Maturana. 72. José Friz Esparza. 73. Carlos Miranda Mesa. 74. Camilo Torres Negrier. 75. Orlando Inostroza Lagos. 76. Carlos López Inostroza. 77. José Seco Alarcón. 78. Lionel Medrano Rivas. 79. Juan Suazo Saldaña.
According to the case records, the operations occurred as follows:
Operation at Calle Conferencia 1587, Santiago
At 03:00 hours on April 29, 1976, agents of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) arrived at the residence located at Calle Conferencia 1587, Santiago, which had been under prior surveillance. They detained the residents Juan Becerra Barrera, María Angélica Gutiérrez Gómez, and her cousin Eliana Gutiérrez Vidal, who were forced to participate in the operation deployed at the property.
They were required to appear as if living a normal life under the observation of DINA agents, who remained at the location waiting for members of the Communist Party to arrive in order to proceed with their detention.
Thus, at 19:00 hours on May 4, 1976, Mario Jaime Zamorano Donoso, the Organization Secretary of the Communist Party, arrived at the property at Calle Conferencia 1587. He was detained by DINA agents and taken to the Villa Grimaldi detention center, located at Av. José Arrieta 8200, in the commune of La Reina, where he remained deprived of liberty, and his subsequent whereabouts remain unknown.
Around 21:00 hours on the same day, Onofre Jorge Muñoz Poutays, a member of the Central Committee of the same organization, arrived at the aforementioned property. He was detained and taken to the Villa Grimaldi barracks by DINA agents, where he remained deprived of liberty, and his subsequent whereabouts remain unknown.
The following day, May 5, 1976, Uldarico Donaire Cortez and Jaime Patricio Donato Avendaño, members of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, arrived at the property on Calle Conferencia. They were detained by DINA agents and subsequently taken to the Villa Grimaldi barracks, where they remained deprived of liberty, and their subsequent whereabouts remain unknown.
Similarly, on May 6, 1976, Elisa del Carmen Escobar Cepeda, a member of the Central Committee of the Communist Party, was detained by DINA agents at the same property using the same procedure. She was taken to the Villa Grimaldi barracks, where she remained deprived of liberty, and her subsequent whereabouts remain unknown.
Operation at Calle Gaspar de Orense 993, Quinta Normal
On May 9, 1976, Lenin Adán Díaz Silva, a member of the Technical Commission of the Communist Party of Chile, was detained by DINA agents at the property located at Calle Gaspar de Orense No. 993, Quinta Normal, Santiago. He was taken to the Villa Grimaldi barracks, where all traces of him were lost, and his whereabouts remain unknown to this date.
Detention operation of Eliana Espinoza Fernández
On May 12, 1976, Eliana Marina Espinoza Fernández, who had boarded public transport on Calle Independencia to head to an undisclosed destination, was detained by DINA agents and taken to the Villa Grimaldi detention center, where she remained deprived of liberty, and her subsequent whereabouts remain unknown.
Operation at Calle Bello Horizonte No. 979, Las Condes Around 01:00 hours on May 12, 1976, DINA agents raided the residence at Calle Bello Horizonte No. 979, in the commune of Las Condes, Santiago, and detained Víctor Manuel Díaz López, the General Secretary of the Communist Party at the time.
They then took him to the Villa Grimaldi barracks, where he remained in captivity and was subjected to constant interrogation and torture. He was subsequently transferred to the DINA barracks located at Simón Bolívar No. 8800 in the commune of La Reina, Santiago, where he spent the final months of his life.
Death of Víctor Díaz López
Once transferred to the DINA barracks located at Simón Bolívar 8800, La Reina, Santiago, Víctor Manuel Díaz López was kept in a regime of confinement and deprivation of liberty, permanently guarded and interrogated by the agents operating at that barracks.
During the afternoon of a day in the first fortnight of January 1977, while he was inside a cell at the aforementioned Simón Bolívar barracks, agents operating at the site—in compliance with an execution order issued by the institution's hierarchical superior and transmitted by the barracks chief to his subordinates—proceeded to kill him.
They used a plastic bag, which they covered over his head and tied around his neck, preventing him from breathing, which caused his death. Once his death was confirmed, the perpetrators placed the body in two thick polyethylene bags, one for the head and one for the feet, which they tied with wire around the waist.
They then tied a piece of rail approximately seventy to eighty centimeters long to the bagged body, and subsequently placed it into two burlap sacks, one for the head and one for the extremities, which were joined with wire.
They transported it to the Peldehue sector, where it was loaded onto a Puma helicopter that was waiting in the area, which departed for the sea, where the body was thrown into an undetermined location.
The private plaintiffs, the State Defense Council, and the Human Rights Program of the Ministry of the Interior were notified of the indictment so that they may adhere to it or file a private accusation in the case.
With the minister's indictment and the adhesions or private accusations, the defense teams of the accused will be notified to move to the plenary stage before the first-instance sentence is handed down.
Source: elmostrador.cl, October 22, 2013
Former DINA agents are prosecuted for the kidnapping of Nalvia Mena Alvarado
The Santiago Court of Appeals issued a prosecution in the case of the aggravated kidnapping of Nalvia Mena Alvarado, which occurred in April 1976. Minister Leopoldo Llanos confirmed the prosecutions for authorship of the crime against former agents of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA): Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda, Carlos López Tapia, Pedro Espinoza Bravo, Juan Morales Salgado, Marcelo Moren Brito, Rolf Wenderoth Pozo, Eugenio Fieldhouse Chavez, and Jorge Andrade Gómez.
Meanwhile, agents Gladys Calderón Carreño, Rufino Jaime Astorga, José Friz Esparza, Hernán Alfaro Mundaca, Orlando Inostroza Lagos, Pedro Bitterlich Jaramillo, Claudio Pacheco Fernández, Eduardo Reyes Lagos, Orlando Torrejón Gatica, Orlando Altamirano Sanhueza, and Carlos López Inostroza were prosecuted as accomplices.
“The consequence of this detention is that she is considered forcibly disappeared, since, having been deprived of liberty, she has not made contact with her relatives, nor has she carried out administrative procedures before State agencies or private organizations, nor are there any records of her entering or leaving the country, and her death has not been confirmed,” explains the judicial document that reviews the abuses committed at the “Villa Grimaldi” and Simón Bolívar torture houses.
Source: radio.uchile.cl, September 12, 2014
Nearly one hundred former DINA agents accused of kidnappings in the framework of Operation Colombo
The presiding judge of the Santiago Court of Appeals, Hernán Crisosto Greisse, issued three new indictments in investigative proceedings he is conducting regarding the so-called “Operation Colombo,” concerning victims of aggravated kidnapping perpetrated between July 1974 and February 1975.
In the resolution, Judge Crisosto determined to indict former DINA agents for the aggravated kidnappings of Ismael Darío Chávez Lobo, which occurred on July 26, 1974; Washington Cid Urrutia, which occurred on December 8, 1974; and Rodrigo Ugas Morales, which occurred on February 7, 1975.
With this ruling, indictments have been issued to date in 33 of the 37 episodes grouped in the investigation, for a total of 57 victims. According to the gathered evidence, the following facts have been established in the case of Chávez Lobo: “On the night of July 26, 1974, Ismael Darío Chávez Lobos, a militant of the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR), was detained at his home located at Calle Los Copihues No. 1977, in the commune of Quinta Normal, by agents belonging to the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA), who transported him to the clandestine detention center known as “Londres 38,” located at that address in the city of Santiago, which was guarded by armed guards and to which only DINA agents had access. During his stay at the Londres 38 barracks, he remained without contact with the outside world, blindfolded and bound, being continuously subjected to interrogation under torture by DINA agents operating in said barracks for the purpose of obtaining information regarding members of the MIR, in order to proceed with the detention of members of that organization; the last time Chávez Lobos was seen alive was on an undetermined day in the months of July or August 1974, and he remains forcibly disappeared to this day. The name of Ismael Darío appeared on a list of 119 people, published in the national press after it appeared on a list published in the Brazilian magazine “O’ DIA,” dated June 25, 1975, which reported that Ismael Darío Chávez Lobos had died in Argentina, along with 58 other people belonging to the MIR, due to internal disputes that had arisen among those members; The publications that declared the victim Chávez Lobos dead had their origin in disinformation maneuvers carried out by agents of the National Intelligence Directorate abroad.” In this branch of the case, the judge indicted the following 85 former DINA agents as co-perpetrators of the crime of aggravated kidnapping of Chávez Lobos: 01. Juan Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda, 02. César Manríquez Bravo, 03. Pedro Espinoza Bravo, 04. Marcelo Moren Brito, 05. Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, 06. Raúl Eduardo Iturriaga Neumann, 07. Gerardo Ernesto Godoy García, 08. Ricardo Víctor Lawrence Mires, 09. Gerardo Ernesto Urrich González, 10. Ciro Ernesto Torré Sáez, 11. Sergio Hernán Castillo González, 12. Manuel Andrés Carevic Cubillos, 13. Luis Eduardo Mora Cerda, 14. Hermon Helec Alfaro Mundaca, 15. Basclay Humberto Zapata Reyes, 16. José Enrique Fuentes Torres, 17. José Jaime Mora Diocares, 18. José Mario Friz Esparza, 19. Julio José Hoyos Zegarra, 20. Nelson Alberto Paz Bustamante, 21. Claudio Enrique Pacheco Fernández, 22. Héctor Raúl Valdebenito Araya, 23. Héctor Manuel Lira Aravena, 24. Jaime Humberto Paris Ramos, 25. Jorge Laureano Sagardia Monje, 26. José Stalin Muñoz Leal, 27. Nelson Aquiles Ortiz Vignolo, 28. Pedro Segundo Bitterlich Jaramillo, 29. Rudeslindo Urrutia Jorquera, 30. Víctor San Martín Jiménez, 31. Máximo Ramón Aliaga Soto, 32. Juvenal Alfonso Piña Garrido, 33. Camilo Torres Negrier, 34. Manuel Antonio Montre Méndez, 35. Sergio Hernán Castro Andrade, 36. Claudio Orlando Orellana de la Pinta, 37. Hiro Álvarez Vega, 38. Nelson Eduardo Iturriaga Cortés, 39. José Alfonso Ojeda Obando, 40. Carlos Justo Bermúdez Méndez, 41. Gustavo Galvarino Carumán Soto, 42. Orlando Jesús Torrejón Gatica, 43. José Manuel Sarmiento Sotelo, 44. Fernando Adrián Roa Montaña, 45. Gerardo Meza Acuña, 46. Luis René Torres Méndez, 47. Orlando Guillermo Inostroza Lagos, 48. Reinaldo Concha Orellana, 49. Rodolfo Valentino Concha Rodríguez, 50. Luis Salvador Villarroel Gutiérrez, 51. Enrique Tránsito Gutiérrez Rubilar, 52. Hugo del Tránsito Hernández Valle, 53. Juan Ángel Urbina Cáceres, 54. Manuel Rivas Díaz, 55. Risiere del Prado Altez España, 56. Luis Germán Gutiérrez Uribe, 57. Juan Evaristo Duarte Gallegos, 58. Víctor Manuel Molina Astete, 59. Fernando Enrique Guerra Guajardo, 60. Gustavo Humberto Apablaza Meneses, 61. Víctor Manuel Álvarez Droguett, 62. Carlos López Inostroza, 63. Armando Segundo Cofré Correa, 64. José Nelson Fuentealba Saldías, 65. Moisés Paulino Campos Figueroa, 66. Olegario Enrique González Moreno, 67. José Dorohi Hormazábal Rodríguez, 68. Raúl Juan Rodríguez Ponte, 69. Hugo Rubén Delgado Carrasco, 70. Jorge Antonio Lepileo Barrios, 71. Lautaro Eugenio Díaz Espinoza, 72. Óscar Belarmino La Flor Flores, 73. Pedro Ariel Araneda Araneda, 74. Rufino Espinoza Espinoza, 75. Sergio Iván Díaz Lara, 76. Carlos Alfonso Sáez Sanhueza, 77. Roberto Hernán Rodríguez Manquel, 78. Juan Alfredo Villanueva Alvear, 79. Alfredo Orlando Moya Tejeda, 80. Rafael de Jesús Riveros Frost, 81. José Germán Ampuero Ulloa, 82. Leonidas Emiliano Méndez Moreno, 83. Héctor Carlos Díaz Cabezas, 84. Hernán Patricio Valenzuela Salas, and 85. José Avelino Yévenes Vergara. Meanwhile, in the investigation into the aggravated kidnapping of Cid Urrutia, the following was established: “In the early hours of December 8, 1974, Washington Cid Urrutia, a militant of the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR), was detained at his home located at Pasaje 15, No. 2973, Población Cervecerías Unidas, in the commune of Renca, by agents belonging to the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA), who, after binding him and blindfolding him, placed him in the back of a pickup truck and transported him to the clandestine detention center known as “Terranova” or “Villa Grimaldi,” located at José Arrieta No. 8200, in the commune of La Reina, and to “Cuatro Álamos,” located at Calle Canadá No. 3000, in Santiago, which were guarded by armed guards and to which only DINA agents had access; during his stay at the Villa Grimaldi and Cuatro Álamos barracks, the victim Cid Urrutia remained without contact with the outside world, blindfolded and bound, being continuously subjected to interrogation under torture by DINA agents operating in said barracks for the purpose of obtaining information regarding members of the MIR, in order to proceed with the detention of members of that organization; The last time the victim Cid Urrutia was seen alive by other detainees was on an undetermined day in the month of December 1974, and there is no information regarding his whereabouts to this day; the name of Washington Cid Urrutia appeared on a list of 119 people, published in the national press after it appeared on a list published in the magazine Novo O’ Día of Curitiba, Brazil, dated June 25, 1975, which reported that Washington Cid Urrutia had died in Argentina, along with 58 other people belonging to the MIR, due to internal disputes that had arisen among those members; The publications that declared the victim Cid Urrutia dead had their origin in disinformation maneuvers carried out by DINA agents abroad.” For this episode, Judge Crisosto indicted the following 81 former DINA agents as co-perpetrators: 01. Juan Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda, 02. César Manríquez Bravo, 03. Pedro Octavio Espinoza Bravo, 04. Orlando Manzo Durán, 05. Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, 06. Basclay Zapata Reyes, 07. Marcelo Luis Moren Brito, 08. Francisco Maximiliano Ferrer Lima, 09. Raúl Eduardo Iturriaga Neumann, 10. Fernando Eduardo Lauriani Maturana, 11. Gerardo Ernesto Godoy García, 12. Ricardo Víctor Lawrence Mires, 13. Ciro Ernesto Torres Sáez, 14. Manuel Andrés Carevic Cubillos, 15. Alejandro Francisco Molina Cisternas, 16. Eugenio Jesús Fieldhouse Chávez, 17. Rosa Humilde Ramos Hernández, 18. Teresa del Carmen Osorio Navarro, 19. Sylvia Teresa Oyarce Pinto, 20. Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos, 21. José Jaime Mora Diocares, 22. José Mario Fritz Esparza, 23. Julio José Hoyos Zegarra, 24. Nelson Alberto Paz Bustamante, 25. Pedro René Alfaro Fernández, 26. Samuel Enrique Fuenzalida Devia, 27. José Abel Aravena Ruiz, 28. Claudio Enrique Pacheco Fernández, 29. Héctor Raúl Valdebenito Araya, 30. Jaime Humberto Paris Ramos, 31. José Stalin Muñoz Leal, 32. Nelson Aquiles Ortiz Vignolo, 33. Pedro Segundo Bitterlich Jaramillo, 34. Rufino Eduardo Jaime Astorga, 35. Víctor San Martín Jiménez, 36. Juvenal Alfonso Piña Garrido, 37. José Alfonso Ojeda Obando, 38. Gustavo Galvarino Carumán Soto, 39. Heriberto del Carmen Acevedo, 40. Luis René Torres Méndez, 41. Orlando Guillermo Inostroza Lagos, 42. Reinaldo Concha Orellana, 43. Rodolfo Valentino Concha Rodríguez, 44. Luis Salvador Villarroel Gutiérrez, 45. Hugo del Tránsito Hernández Valle, 46. Juan Ángel Urbina Cáceres, 47. Manuel Rivas Díaz, 48. Osvaldo Octavio Castillo Arellano, 49. Víctor Manuel Molina Astete, 50. Fernando Enrique Guerra Guajardo, 51. Guido Arnoldo Jara Brevis, 52. Hugo Hernán Clavería Leiva, 53. Jerónimo del Carmen Neira Méndez, 54. Juan Carlos Escobar Valenzuela, 55. Carlos Enrique Miranda Mesa, 56. Víctor Manuel Álvarez Droguett, 57. Raúl Alberto Soto Pérez, 58. Manuel Heriberto Avendaño González, 59. Carlos Enrique Letelier Verdugo, 60. Herman Eduardo Ávalos Muñoz, 61. Raúl Bernardo Toro Montes, 62. Silvio Antonio Concha González, 63. Héctor Wacinton Briones Burgos, 64. Olegario Enrique González Moreno, 65. Carlos López Inostroza, 66. Ricardo Orlando Zamorano Vergara, 67. Luis Rigoberto Videla Inzunza, 68. Jorge Segundo Madariaga Acevedo, 69. Hugo Rubén Delgado Carrasco, 70. Luis Fernando Espinace Contreras, 71. Jorge Antonio Lepileo Barrios, 72. Lautaro Eugenio Díaz Espinoza, 73. Pedro Ariel Araneda Araneda, 74. Palmira Isabel Almuna Guzmán, 75. Miguel Ángel Yáñez Ugalde, 76. Rafael de Jesús Riveros Frost, 77. Leónidas Emiliano Méndez Moreno, 78. Héctor Carlos Díaz Cabezas, 79. Alejandro Francisco Astudillo Adonis, 80. Demóstenes Eugenio Cárdenas Saavedra, and 81. Rodolfo Gonzalo Wenderoth Pozo. In this episode, the following were also indicted for the crime of Illicit Association: 1. Juan Manuel Guillermo Contreras Sepúlveda, 2. Pedro Octavio Espinoza Bravo, 3. Raúl Eduardo Iturriaga Neumann, 4. Marcelo Luis Manuel Moren Brito, 5. Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, and 6. Rolf Gonzalo Wenderoth Pozo. In the investigation into the aggravated kidnapping of Ugas Morales, it was established “that on the afternoon of February 7, 1975, Rodrigo Eduardo Ugas Morales, a militant of the Movement of the Revolutionary Left (MIR), was detained on a public street in the Estación Central sector of Santiago by agents belonging to the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA), who transported him to the clandestine DINA detention center known as “Cuartel Terranova” or “Villa Grimaldi,” located at Lo Arrieta No. 8200, in the commune of La Reina, which was guarded by armed guards and to which only DINA agents had access; during his stay at the Villa Grimaldi barracks, the victim remained without contact with the outside world, blindfolded and bound, being continuously subjected to interrogation under torture by DINA agents operating in said barracks for the purpose of obtaining information regarding members of the MIR, in order to proceed with the detention of members of that organization; The last time the victim Ugas Morales was seen alive was on an undetermined day in the month of February 1975, and he remains forcibly disappeared to this day; The name of Rodrigo Eduardo Ugas Morales appeared on a list of 119 people, published in the national press after it appeared on a list published in the Argentine magazine “LEA,” dated July 15, 1975, which reported that Rodrigo Eduardo Ugas Morales had died in Argentina, along with 59 other people belonging to the MIR, due to internal disputes that had arisen among those members; The publications that declared the victim Ugas Morales dead had their origin in disinformation maneuvers carried out by DINA agents abroad.” For this crime, the following 75 former DINA agents were indicted: 01. Juan Manuel Contreras Sepúlveda, 02. César Manríquez Bravo, 03. Pedro Espinoza Bravo, 04. Marcelo Luis Moren Brito, 05. Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, 06. Basclay Zapata Reyes, 07. Francisco Maximiliano Ferrer Lima, 08. Raúl Eduardo Iturriaga Neumann, 09. Fernando Eduardo Lauriani Maturana, 10. Gerardo Ernesto Godoy García, 11. Ricardo Víctor Lawrence Mires, 12. Ciro Ernesto Torré Sáez, 13. Manuel Andrés Carevic Cubillos, 14. Alejandro Francisco Molina Cisternas, 15. Eugenio Jesús Fieldhouse Chávez, 16. Rosa Humilde Ramos Hernández, 17. Teresa del Carmen Osorio Navarro, 18. Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos, 19. José Jaime Mora Diocares, 20. José Mario Friz Esparza, 21. Nelson Alberto Paz Bustamante, 22. Pedro René Alfaro Fernández, 23. Samuel Enrique Fuenzalida Devia, 24. José Abel Aravena Ruiz, 25. Claudio Enrique Pacheco Fernández, 26. Delia Virginia Gajardo Cortés, 27. Héctor Raúl Valdebenito Araya, 28. José Stalin Muñoz Leal, 29. Nelson Aquiles Ortiz Vignolo, 30. Pedro Segundo Bitterlich Jaramillo, 31. Rufino Eduardo Jaime Astorga, 32. José Alfonso Ojeda Obando, 33. Gustavo Galvarino Carumán Soto, 34. Heriberto del Carmen Acevedo, 35. Luis René Torres Méndez, 36. Orlando Guillermo Inostroza Lagos, 37. Reinaldo Concha Orellana, 38. Rodolfo Valentino Concha Rodríguez, 39. Luis Salvador Villarroel Gutiérrez, 40. Hugo del Tránsito Hernández Valle, 41. Juan Ángel Urbina Cáceres, 42. Manuel Rivas Díaz, 43. Osvaldo Octavio Castillo Arellano, 44. Víctor Manuel Molina Astete, 45. Fernando Enrique Guerra Guajardo, 46. Guido Arnoldo Jara Brevis, 47. Hugo Hernán Clavería Leiva, 48. Jerónimo del Carmen Neira Méndez, 49. Jorge Luis Venegas Silva, 50. Juan Carlos Escobar Valenzuela, 51. Carlos Enrique Miranda Mesa, 52. Víctor Manuel Álvarez Droguett, 53. Raúl Alberto Soto Pérez, 54. Carlos Enrique Letelier Verdugo, 55. Herman Eduardo Ávalos Muñoz, 56. Raúl Bernardo Toro Montes, 57. Silvio Antonio Concha González, 58. Héctor Wacinton Briones Burgos, 59. Pedro Mora Villanueva, 60. Carlos López Inostroza, 61. José Nelson Fuentealba Saldías, 62. Moisés Paulino Campos Figueroa, 63. Luis Rigoberto Videla Inzunza, 64. Raúl Juan Rodríguez Ponte, 65. Óscar Belarmino La Flor Flores, 66. Pedro Ariel Araneda Araneda, 67. Sergio Iván Díaz Lara, 68. Palmira Isabel Almuna Guzmán, 69. Osvaldo Pulgar Gallardo, 70. Roberto Hernán Rodríguez Manquel, 71. Miguel Ángel Yáñez Ugalde, 72. Rafael de Jesús Riveros Frost, 73. Leonidas Emiliano Méndez Moreno, 74. Héctor Carlos Díaz Cabezas, and 75. Rolf Gonzalo Wenderoth Pozo. Additionally, in this branch of the case, the following were indicted as authors of the crime of Illicit Association: 1. Juan Manuel Guillermo Contreras Sepúlveda, 2. Pedro Octavio Espinoza Bravo, 3. Raúl Eduardo Iturriaga Neumann, 4. Marcelo Luis Manuel Moren Brito, 5. Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, and 6. Rolf Gonzalo Wenderoth Pozo.
Source: El Periodista.cl, June 7, 2018
Court of Appeals acquits six former DINA agents and reduces sentences for 11 others accused of kidnapping and homicide in 1976
The Eighth Chamber of the Court of Appeals acquitted a group of six former DINA agents and reduced the sentences of 11 others, who were granted the substitute penalty of intensive supervised release for a period of five years. "If such substitution is revoked, they must serve the initially imposed sentences," the ruling clarifies.
The crimes were committed in 1976, and today, after decades, three judges of the appellate court have sealed, in the first instance, the fate of the 17 former agents linked to the kidnapping and murder of an equal number of people.
The Santiago Court of Appeals reported that last Friday, April 9, presiding judge Leopoldo Llanos issued a final first-instance judgment and acquitted six former DINA agents accused as perpetrators and accomplices of the crimes of aggravated kidnapping and aggravated homicide that occurred during the dictatorship in 1976.
These are Juan Morales Salgado, author of the crimes of aggravated kidnapping of Nalvia Mena Alvarado, Clara Canteros Torres, Juan Aurelio Villarroel Zárate, and the aggravated homicide of Eduardo Canteros Prado.
Ciro Torré Sáez and Orlando Manzo Durán, accused as perpetrators of the crimes of aggravated kidnapping of Manuel Segundo Recabarren Rojas, Alejandro Rodríguez Urzúa, and José Eduardo Santander Miranda. (Orlando José Manzo Durán passed away on July 8, 2019, and no resolution has yet been issued regarding him).
And Jorge Andrade Gómez, accused of being the perpetrator of the crime of aggravated kidnapping of Daniel Palma Robledo. In addition, Gladys Calderón Carreño, an accomplice to the crimes of kidnapping and homicide of Eduardo Canteros Prado, was also acquitted.
And Hermon Helec Alfaro Mundaca, also an accomplice to the crime of kidnapping of Daniel Palma Robledo. The Court of Appeals also decided to sentence 11 other former agents to various prison terms for being perpetrators of repeated crimes of aggravated kidnapping and multiple homicides, granting them the substitute penalty of supervised release.
Likewise, the Court of Appeals noted that Judge Llanos accepted 37 civil lawsuits for amounts ranging from $50,000 to $100,000,000. The ruling adds that various cassation and appeal motions were filed against said sentences.
However, the Court declared that all cassation motions filed by the defense of the convicted Claudio Pacheco Fernández and Gustavo Guerrero Aguilera were rejected. Reduction of sentences The Eighth Chamber of the court, presided over by Judge Juan Cristóbal Mera and composed of Judge Mireya López and attorney Cristián Lepín, indicated that the sentence imposed on Ricardo Lawrence Mires as the perpetrator of the crimes of aggravated kidnapping is reduced to three years and one day of minor imprisonment in its maximum degree, absolute perpetual disqualification for political rights, absolute disqualification for public offices and positions during the term of the sentence, and payment of the costs of the case. The same applies to Jorge Andrade Gómez, Juan Morales Salgado, Ciro Torré Sáez, Sergio Orlando Escalona, and Gladys Calderón Carreño, all as perpetrators of the crimes of aggravated kidnapping. The Court reported that, meeting the legal requirements, each of the convicted individuals is granted the substitute penalty of intensive supervised release for a period of five years, and they must also comply with the requirements of Article 17 of Law 18.216. "If such substitution is revoked, they must serve the initially imposed sentences, which will be counted from the time they present themselves or are apprehended, with credit given for the time they were deprived of liberty, as referred to in the ruling under review," the ruling specifies. Finally, it is noted that the final and partial dismissals decreed due to the deaths of Orlando Guillermo Inostroza Lagos, Eduardo Antonio Reyes Lagos, Rufino Eduardo Jaime Astorga, Juan Manuel Guillermo Contreras Sepúlveda, Marcelo Luis Morén Brito, Bernardo del Rosario Daza Navarro, Guillermo Jesús Ferrán Martínez, Eugenio Jesús Fieldhouse Chávez, and José Mario Friz Esparza, respectively, are approved.
Source: elmostrador.cl, April 12, 2020
Chile: Victims' families reject Court ruling acquitting dictatorship agents
The ruling of the Eighth Chamber of the Santiago Court of Appeals that acquitted 8 former DINA agents of crimes against humanity and reduced the sentences of 9 others caused annoyance among the families of the victims of Augusto Pinochet's dictatorship, who considered the judicial resolution a gesture of impunity.
Presiding judge Leopoldo Llanos had issued—in mid-2017—sentences for 16 kidnappings and 1 aggravated homicide at Villa Grimaldi. However, the decision of judges Juan Cristóbal Mera and Mireya López, and the participating attorney Cristián Lepín, nullified the first-instance conviction of the former members of the National Intelligence Directorate (DINA) Pedro Espinoza Bravo, Rolf Wenderoth, Hermon Alfaro, Pedro Betterlich, Claudio Pacheco, Orlando Torrejón, Orlando Altamirano, and Carlos López.
Regarding the rest of the accused—Ricardo Lawrence, Jorge Andrade, Juan Morales Salgado, Ciro Torré, Sergio Escalona, Juvenal Piña, Jorge Díaz, Gustavo Guerrero, and Gladys Calderón—the sentence was reduced to 3 years and 1 day of imprisonment.
For all these repressors, several of whom have already been convicted in other cases, Judge Llanos had finalized sentences that started at 5 years and 1 day in prison. “Judges nostalgic for the civil-military dictatorship” For the Association of Families of the Forcibly Disappeared (AFDD), the second-instance ruling “represents in every respect the position of Pinochetism within the Judiciary.” “They are judges nostalgic for the civil-military dictatorship, who vindicate human rights violations by granting impunity to the DINA agents who committed kidnapping, torture, homicide, and forced disappearance, maintaining that the victims, due to their political circumstances—all militants of the Communist Party—were in a pre-existing situation of risk,” it stated. Furthermore, the AFDD recalled that “our family members continue to have the status of forcibly disappeared, and the perpetrators are granted supervised release.” “The effect of this ruling for us, the families of the victims, has been devastating. The lack of justice and truth for which we have fought for so many years, with marches, mobilizations, chaining ourselves, protests, and hunger strikes, is felt once again with profound pain,” said the organization. The Party for Democracy (PPD) also reacted, expressing its “firm repudiation” of the sentence, because “as long as some judges continue to assume the equivalence between crimes against humanity and common crimes, they will inevitably continue to promote the application of unheard-of sentences for a democratic regime.” “It is the duty of the State of Chile to advance in sanctioning proportionally to the crime committed, to guarantee non-repetition, to provide comprehensive reparations, as well as to avoid using internal provisions that contradict international law, such as pardons, substitute penalties, partial statutes of limitations, and sentence reductions,” the statement notes. “We urge the Honorable Supreme Court to restore the rule of law, in accordance with what is established by international law, in the norms of Ius Cogens, international treaties, general principles, and evidently in inter-American jurisprudence,” said the party.
Source: nodal.am, April 13, 2020
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