Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

forest444

(5,902 posts)
Sun Sep 18, 2016, 01:05 AM Sep 2016

Argentina marks 10 years since disappearance of Dirty War trial star witness Jorge Julio López.

Ceremonies were held today in numerous Argentine cities to honor Jorge Julio López, the retired, soft-spoken bricklayer whose testimony was key in the 2006 conviction of former police inspector Miguel Etchecolatz for crimes against humanity during the Dirty War in the 1970s. López, who was 76 at the time, disappeared ten years ago today.

Prosecutors investigating López's disappearance have so far collated over five million phone records and examined the DNA of 98 John Doe bodies found between 2006 and 2015. The case, however, remains one of Argentina's most prominent unsolved mysteries.

López disappeared from his home in the the working-class suburb of Los Hornos, just south of La Plata, on September 18, 2006. His harrowing testimony was decisive in the trial against former Buenos Aires Provincial Police Chief Inspector Miguel Etchecolatz for crimes against humanity three decades earlier.

He was scheduled to give be the closing witness in Etchecolatz's trial at the First District Federal Court of La Plata the day of his disappearance, and was first noticed missing by his son. The court, headed by Judge Carlos Rozanski, sentenced Etchecolatz to life in prison the following day, September 19. He was only the second Dirty War defendant convicted following President Néstor Kirchner's signature of a bill rescinding amnesty for such perpetrators in 2003.

López's witness testimony was based on his experience as a political detainee between October 1976 and June 1979, during which time he was held without charges in three clandestine detention centers and repeatedly tortured. A bricklayer for many years, he was able to recognize at least two of his former places of captivity from masonry elements peculiar to each, even when some of them had been remodeled.

López's second disappearance was widely believed to have been carried out by former Provincial Police officers with ties to the dictatorship. Its intent, according to the governor at the time of the incident, Felipe Solá, was to “intimidate future witnesses or prevent their participation in other trials against dictatorship-era repressers.” A similar case, the murder of 84 year-old pianist Myrtha Raia days before was to testify in a case involving 41 former officers and 222 deaths, took place on January 29, 2013; all defendants were found guilty a year later.

“In those years it was inconceivable for us, in a democracy, to receive such a mafia-like message. One of such magnitude - the second disappearance of Jorge Julio López,” Judge Carlos Rozanski told the Buenos Aires Herald in an interview.

In sentencing Etchecolatz, Rozanski became the first judge to use the term “genocide” to describe the the crimes that took place under the fascist military dictatorship that ruled Argentine between 1976 and 1983. Around 300 secret detention centers were maintained nationwide, and an estimated 30,000 people were killed or disappeared in these between 1975 and 1979.

Etchecolatz, who responded directly to the Provincial Police Director Ramón Camps, managed at least 30 such detention centers. He was granted a transfer to house arrest by a La Plata tribunal on August 20 on account of his advanced age (87). The ruling has been appealed by plaintiffs - but not by the right-wing Mauricio Macri administration, whose Justice Minister, Germán Garavano, was revealed to have held secret talks with Argentina's most prominent Dirty War apologist, Cecilia Pando.

Etchecolatz remains unrepentant, and has since twice been photographed in court writing intimidating messages to witnesses in other trials. The messages read simply “Jorge Julio López.”

At: http://buenosairesherald.com/article/221716/jorge-julio-l%C3%B3pez-no-answers-10-years-on

And: https://translate.google.com/translate?hl=en&sl=es&u=http://www.infonews.com/nota/301716/a-diez-anos-la-justicia-no-tiene-pistas&prev=search

[center]

Jorge Julio López[/center]

2 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Argentina marks 10 years since disappearance of Dirty War trial star witness Jorge Julio López. (Original Post) forest444 Sep 2016 OP
I hope Etchecolatz gets hit by a bus long before he could expect to die peacefully in his sleep. Judi Lynn Sep 2016 #1
I hear you, Judi. forest444 Sep 2016 #2

Judi Lynn

(160,530 posts)
1. I hope Etchecolatz gets hit by a bus long before he could expect to die peacefully in his sleep.
Sun Sep 18, 2016, 03:05 AM
Sep 2016

Hit by a bus, then scraped along the street with a bulldozer and shoved into an open man hole.

Evil men do unbelievable things when they believe they have the support of other evil fascists to protect them.

Thank you so much for posting the photo of this good man from Argentina. He was courageous a very long time. May he rest in peace, far more than the suffering he endured at the hands of primitive perverts of the dictatorship during his life.

When they get so low they start assassinating the witnesses who would tell the truth about them, you know they should never see the light of day in the future, and shouldn't have been here in the first place.

The fool of fools is Etchecolatz. He's got a lot to look forward to.

forest444

(5,902 posts)
2. I hear you, Judi.
Sun Sep 18, 2016, 01:57 PM
Sep 2016

Personally, I'd like to think that someone like Etchecolatz should be reborn as a poor black youth in Baltimore or Louisiana (perhaps Colombia). Perhaps then that lost soul of his would learn first hand how wrong it is for those we entrust with our security to abuse their power, and to feel a little more empathy.

As for Julio López, we'll probably never know who exactly murdered him or where his remains were disposed (they were probably incinerated). A sinister code of silence shrouds living Dirty War perpetrators, and despite a decade-long investigation and an outstanding reward offer of 2 million pesos ($130,000), no leads have developed at all and no one has come forward.

The same can be said about Myrtha Raia, the pianist from San Miguel de Tucumán who, in 2013, was bludgeoned to death in her home just days before she was to testify in the principal case dealing with Isabel Perón's Operation Independence (the 2nd Arsenal/2nd Precinct case).

You might recall that the chief plaintiffs' attorney in the case - Laura Figueroa - recently had her home ransacked; as in Raia's case, nothing was stolen.

All 41 defendants were sentenced in 2014, you'll be happy to know; but Raia's murder has yet to be solved because no one will talk - least of all now that Macri is in office.

Thank you, Judi, as always for your thoughtful - and dare I say, passionate! - replies and insights.

Latest Discussions»Region Forums»Latin America»Argentina marks 10 years ...