Inteligencia y Seguridad Frente Externo En Profundidad Economia y Finanzas Transparencia
  En Parrilla Medio Ambiente Sociedad High Tech Contacto
Inteligencia y Seguridad  
 
30/08/2011 | For Mexico’s accused criminals, made-for-TV confessions

William Booth

Hours after his capture, authorities paraded the alleged mass murderer Oscar Osvaldo Garcia before the news media to have his picture taken. This performance — called “the presentation” — is an almost daily ritual in Mexico.

 

What is new: Mexican law enforcement officers are increasingly bolstering these high-profile “perp walks” with edited video clips of the accused confessing their crimes on camera.

In Mexico, as in the United States, the bad guys have the right to ask for a lawyer. Instead they tell police things like, “I killed 600 people.”

Which is exactly what Garcia did in his 15 minutes of fame. And he is not alone.

Though fishy admissions of guilt, coerced and otherwise, have been a fixture of Mexico’s troubled judicial system for decades, now the era of the videotaped confession has arrived.

In recent months, El Chango admitted he was the leader of La Familia cartel; El Pajaro said on camera he was responsible for a deadly grenade attack; El Mamito agreed he was the owner of five “narco tanks.”

These sensational videotaped confessions have become the latest tactic employed by media-savvy officials trying to convince a skeptical electorate that authorities are not just arresting criminals, but criminals guilty of the crimes of which they are accused.

“This is for the authorities, who want to show they are working hard and defeating the criminals. It is a publicity stunt,” said Raul Cardenas Rioseco, a lawyer who defended the brother of former president Carlos Salinas de Gortari against corruption charges.

“These kinds of declarations have absolutely no value in court,” said John Ackerman, a professor at the Institute for Legal Research at the National Autonomous University of Mexico.

But they make for mesmerizing TV.

Five days after Garcia was arrested, the attorney general for the state of Mexico, Alfredo Castillo, released a video clip of the suspect’s interrogation.

Prosecutor: “How many executions have you ordered?”

Garcia: “Ordered? I believe more than 300 executions.”

Prosecutor: “And how many have you done?”

Garcia: “Another 300, more or less, I have done with my own hands, around 300.”

Prosecutor: “And what did you use to cut off their heads?”

Garcia: “With knives and chain saws.”

During the exchange, Garcia appears relaxed and confident. He is a handsome 36-year-old, with thick, wavy hair, bright white teeth and that just-barely-there beard popular with male models.

His nickname is “El Compayito,” a hand puppet on television. His gang — called “the hand with eyes,” a reference to the same character — is allegedly vying for control of drug trafficking and distribution in and around Mexico City.

“I was trained to kill,” Garcia said in the video, with a shrug.

Castillo said that Garcia deserted from the Mexican marines and that he trained in explosives and worked as a bodyguard for major cartel capos, including Edgar “La Barbie” Valdez, a top assassin for the Beltran Leyva organization who was arrested last year.

In fact, La Barbie also confessed on TV, boasting of receiving trailers full of cash from the United States and revealing he was working with a producer to make a film version of his life.

Washington Post (Estados Unidos)

 


Otras Notas Relacionadas... ( Records 5271 to 5271 of 5271 )
fecha titulo
14/11/2002 De México para el mundo: Conferencia México contra la Corrupción


Otras Notas del Autor
fecha
Título
20/08/2012|
28/06/2012|
31/07/2011|
30/05/2011|
30/05/2011|
15/04/2011|
24/02/2011|
12/02/2011|
08/10/2010|
22/07/2010|
16/06/2010|
10/06/2010|
11/02/2010|
10/02/2010|
04/12/2009|
04/12/2009|
14/12/2008|

ver + notas
 
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Freedom House