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Luis Garavito

Luis Alfredo Garavito Cubillos (born 25 January 1957), also known as La Bestia ("The Beast")
is a Colombian serial killer, pederast, rapist, child molester, and necrophile.[7] In October 1999,
he confessed to committing the rape, torture, mutilation and murder of 147 minors,[8][9]
predominately young men and boys in the western Colombian region.
Luis Garavito

Mugshot taken in April 1999 by the Colombian National Police (Policía Nacional de Colombia)

Born Luis Alfredo Garavito Cubillos

25 January 1957

Génova, Quindío, Colombia

Other names The Beast

Goofy

The Monster of Génova

The Priest

The Madman

Conflict

Alfredo Salazar

Bonifacio Morera Lizcano

Criminal charge Murder

Rape

Violent sexual act[1]

Penalty 1,853 years and 9 days' imprisonment (2001)[2]

835 years' imprisonment (2000)[3][4]

22 years' imprisonment in Ecuador (2007)[5]

Details

Victims 193+ (142 convicted)[4][3][5]


Span of crimes 1992–1999

Country Colombia

Ecuador

Venezuela

State(s) Valle del Cauca, Boyacá, Meta Department,


Quindío, Risaralda, Cundinamarca, Nariño, Huila,
Caquetá, Antioquia and Caldas, Chone
(Ecuador)[6]

Date apprehended 22 April 1999

Imprisoned at EPAMS Valledupar – La Tramacúa

Beginning a series of torture-rapes on minors aged 6 to 16 in the autumn of 1980, Garavito


was estimated to have raped and tortured a minimum of 200 minors, before committing the
rape, torture, mutilation and murder of an additional 189 minors in Colombia from 4 October
1992 to 21 April 1999,[10][4][3] and a further 4 murders in Ecuador during the summer of
1998.[5][11][6]

Apprehended on 22 April 1999 for the attempted rape of 12-year-old John Iván Sabogal,
Garavito was held under suspicion for several months until confession on 28 October
1999.[10] The judicial body ruled that all Garavito's sentences total 1,853 years and 9 days in
jail.[12] Between his Colombian and Ecuadorian victims, Garavito is confirmed to have
murdered at least 193 minors in total, making him the most prolific serial killer in modern
history. If his 2003 confession is to be believed, his murders of 23 minors and 5 adults would
raise his murder victim count to 221.[13]

Background

Childhood

Luis Alfredo Garavito Cubillos was born in Génova, Quindío, on 25 January 1957 to Manuel
Antonio Garavito and Rosa Delia Cubillos. The eldest son of seven siblings, he had three
brothers and three sisters. His father Manuel Antonio was described by Garavito as
adulterous, drunken, macho, very strict, and often physically and emotionally abusive to
Garavito throughout his childhood; he further went on to describe his mother Rosa Delia as a
violent woman,[14] and someone who showed him little affection and care as a child. On
account of the ongoing armed conflict in Colombia at the time, the family was forced to
relocate to Ceilán, Valle del Cauca before Garavito entered primary school.[15]

Due to the instability of his parents' marriage, the household was plagued by years of
incessant fighting, domestic violence, and extreme neglect.[15][16] When Garavito was six or
seven, he recalled being strapped to a tree and beaten with a tree branch by his father as he
attempted to defend his mother, whom Manuel was known to beat even in pregnancy.[15]
Evidently, the beatings his father inflicted were so spontaneous and severe that they
prompted Garavito and his siblings to hide upon his returning home from work.[17] Sleeping
in the same bed as his father, Garavito also alleged he had been fondled on one occasion.[15]

Growing up, Garavito was referred to as an imbecile, a bastard, and other pejoratives by his
father, whom he claimed had "never had a good word" for him, only ever bringing Garavito
with him for work-related purposes and to run errands. Attending Simón Bolívar School in
Ceilán, he was said to be shy and reserved, and often the subject of ridicule by other children
in spite of his violent temper. Teachers had found him enthusiastic to learn, but noted his
frustration with his inability to understand subjects. Nicknamed "Garabato" (meaning
"Squiggle") for his glasses and timid nature by bullies, Garavito was very insecure of his
glasses and made few attempts to play with other children due to ostracizing.[15] His
teachers made no attempts to stop the bullying, which distressed Garavito.[16]

Around 1968, his father forbade him to finish the fifth grade in favor of making money to
sustain the family. This dismayed Garavito, who was also forbidden to have friends or a
girlfriend by his father. Shortly thereafter in 1969, Garavito was subject to brutal physical
and sexual abuse by a local drug-store owner and neighbor on his father's visits to the store
for Garavito's vaccinations. The neighbor—who was a close friend of his father's—had
allegedly bound Garavito to a bed, before proceeding to burn him with a candle, cut him with
a razor blade, and bite him violently during these incidents of molestation.[18]

Adolescence

When Garavito was first abused, his psychological trauma led him to kill and dissect two
birds, which prompted him to feel remorse and shame shortly thereafter. After stoning the
birds, Garavito would begin to suggest to his younger brothers and sisters that they sleep
with him naked in the bed they shared. He then began sexually fondling his younger siblings
—which was evidently overlooked by parents Manuel and Rosa—as they slept, often stripping
them naked on the family farm.[15][16][n 1] Garavito would also claim to have begun abusing a
6 year old boy.[14] According to those who knew him, Garavito would become very
withdrawn, extremely aggressive, and "ready to take revenge on the world."[19]

The abuse by the neighbor ended after the family's relocation to Trujillo in 1971;[20] the
physical trauma endured had proven so severe that Garavito would not be able to properly
ejaculate and would sustain an erectile dysfunction problem that would follow him into
adulthood.[19] Fearing that his father would not believe him and believing that no one would
care anyway, Garavito chose to keep his sexual abuse experiences to himself.[15] Soon after
arriving in Trujillo, Garavito was shown heterosexual pornography by another neighboring
family friend. Because he expressed disgust at what he saw, the neighbor beat him into the
undergrowth before raping him.[21][n 2] In 1972, Garavito aggressively and repeatedly
attempted to initiate sexual relations with women as a 15-year-old youth, but his advances
toward them were consistently rejected.[22]

Through various alcoholic family members, Garavito was able to access alcoholic drink and
developed an addiction.[23][14][n 3] Because of his rebelliousness and sexual inclinations,
Garavito would be kicked out on a repeated basis throughout his teens; once by his mother
Rosa in 1972 for attempting to rape a 5-year-old boy—in which he first acknowledged his
pederast and sadistic tendencies[16]—and again in 1973 following an attempted sexual
assault on a 6-year-old boy at a train station in Bogotá. The boy screamed, which alerted
authorities to arrest Garavito, who stated he only wanted to "lightly" molest the child in
response to an attempted rape charge. Following the latter incident, Garavito would be
reprimanded by his father Manuel for not choosing a woman to sexually assault instead of a
young boy. With Garavito's homosexuality causing frequent arguments between him and his
father Manuel, he was evicted for the final time for "homosexual behavior".[16][15] Throughout
his early life, Garavito was described as consistently without friends and never rooted in any
particularly stable environment, which was later noted by various experts to be highly
contributive to his later development of antisocial personality disorder.[24]

As a young man, Garavito started working as an assistant at a compensation fund and later
in a chain of stores, and studying in marketing. Despite his new-found career, he began to
have problems with his co-workers, clients and bosses which would gradually escalate to
physical altercations.[25] After losing his job, Garavito worked as a street vendor who sold
religious icons and a migrant worker, developing primarily platonic relationships with various
women over the course of his adulthood.[26] Working on a coffee plantation as a youth in the
early 1970s in Trujillo, he first fell in love with a schoolteacher and single mother named Luz
Mary Ocampo Orozco whom he later attended weekly mass services with.[27][15]

Many of the women he befriended had children, whom Garavito was known to have treated
as if they were his own children, in addition to being a loving boyfriend when sober.[27]
Garavito was also known by his friends to be amicable in spite of his violent temper and
occasional drunken states, in which he had evidently sworn to murder his father. While
drunk, Garavito—an increasingly jealous and controlling partner in relationships[15]—was also
prone to physically abusing his girlfriends over insignificant problems, if there were any at all.
As a result, he often found himself the subject of town gossip and frequent evictions by his
female partners.[28]

Adulthood

1970s

Garavito would be plagued with symptoms of psychosis, paranoia and depression as a


result of the extreme abuses he had faced as a child and adolescent. For the majority of the
1970s and the 1980s, he would sexually molest children of both sexes as he spiraled into
mental illness; his attraction would gradually turn pederast however. Suffering from
depression and suicidal tendencies, he expressed a desire to start a family.[15] Insisting on
having sexual intercourse with female partners when drunk, he would consistently fail to
maintain an erection, prompting an unprovoked emotional rant concerning his hatred for his
family.[16]

Garavito gradually fell into alcoholism to cope with his traumatic childhood, and began to
participate in Alcoholics Anonymous meetings in 1978.[15] Garavito also converted to the
Pentecostal faith and began working as a store clerk, where he had coincidentally
reconnected briefly with his first girlfriend Luz Mary.[27] Drifting from his family, he was only
close to his older sister, Esther, who avoided him due to his alcoholism.[29] Relocating to the
town of Armenia, Garavito acquired a day job at a bakery before being fired as a result of
provoking a fight with his co-workers; he subsequently attempted suicide.

1980s

Following this failed attempt, Garavito sought psychiatric care at the San Juan de Dios
hospital and was repeatedly hospitalized throughout the spring of 1980, where he expressed
a desire to die on account of his feelings of worthlessness.[15] He was primarily treated for
his diagnosed depression in spite of his evident psychosis and bulimia;[23] he was prescribed
medication for psychosis.[16] Intent on being truthful with the psychiatrist, Garavito stated
that he wanted to have children, before misdirecting this statement into implying he wanted
to start a family. Fearful of consequences, Garavito chose not to inform the psychiatrist of his
pedophilia or his sexual impotence with female partners. Following his attendance of local
church services in which he would remorsefully beat his chest during prayer, Garavito would
subsequently attend Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and occasionally visit psychiatrists
before ending his day by frequenting Valencia Park, a known hotspot for child
prostitution.[15]

Garavito obtained employment at a supermarket in Armenia, being given 2-hour lunch


breaks on Thursday and Sunday noons; he then began a relationship with a single mother
named Claudia in 1980, a beautician whom he described as being the first woman whose
company he enjoyed. This relationship would be short-lived however, as Garavito apparently
could not sustain Claudia's spending habits.[15] Satiating his sexual desires by binding and
raping children during his lunch breaks in neighboring Quimbaya and Calarcá, Garavito did
not engage in intercourse with Claudia.[16] Later that year, Garavito would escalate his habit
of molesting children at least once a month to torturing the children with methods used on
himself as a child by his abusers.

He would then write the name of the molested child in a blue notebook and pray for them
while pacing his room, fervently beating his chest while naked in a ritual-like fashion. He also
began compulsively reading the Bible each night, attempting to find an explanation[20]—
particularly in the Book of Psalms—for his molestation and torture of youths. Suffering from
bouts of depression and guilt from his crimes, Garavito would find himself suffering from
nightmares about the children, waking up in tears before entering fits of hysterical laughter
as he remembered the pleasure received from their pain.[15] Despite this, Garavito developed
an interest in esoteric study, tarot readings and Satanism.[17] He would visit palm readers
and other occultic practitioners before deciding that they were just as clueless as he was
regarding the occult.[15]

Discovering Adolf Hitler's book Mein Kampf, Garavito also became fond of Hitler upon
discovering similarities in their early lives, homosexual experiences, and years spent in
vagrancy.[17] This fondness would turn into idolization, expressing admiration for Hitler, mass
graves of the Holocaust, and stating that he "liked the concentration camps". On 25 January
1984, Garavito would be housed under psychiatric care for 33 days following a mental
breakdown; he was prescribed antipsychotic medication and referred to psychotherapy for
his depression. After obtaining a permit to leave on 28 February 1984, Garavito fled to
Pereira where he immediately lured, bound, molested, and tortured two children in the sector
of Getsemani. He then began storing scalpels, candles, and razor blades in plastic bags for
future victims. Having molested and tortured more than a hundred children by this period,
Garavito was briefly detained for stealing jewelry from a friend.[15]

In addition to his fascination with Hitler, Garavito developed an obsession with Colombian
spree killer Campo Elías Delgado in December 1986,[15] immediately admiring his mass
murder at a Bogotá restaurant, the attention it received, and wanting to emulate him as he
and others noted it on television at a bar.[30] From this point on, Garavito would harbour
fantasies of acquiring a machine gun and—starting with his father—annihilating his family
before committing suicide.[22] Admiring mass murders akin to that of Delgado's, Garavito felt
that committing suicide following a mass murder would be an ideal way to die for him.[10]

During this period, Garavito found another girlfriend named Graciela Zabaleta, a single
mother who resided near the local psychiatric centres in which he was committed. After
introducing himself, Garavito casually suggested that she be his permanent companion.
Charmed by his confidence, Zabaleta let Garavito live with her in exchange for providing
meals and paying bills in their household. As such, Garavito regularly spent his spare savings
on his "family" in Pereira.[15][31] Staying for three or four days on average, Garavito would be
gone most of the month, but took care to warn Zabaleta's teenage son to not go into the
street, and to take care of himself, showering the family with love and affection he felt he
never had in early life. Despite this, Zabaleta was wary of Garavito's alcoholism, which often
spurred scandalous and antisocial behaviour.[31] Like Luz Mary, Garavito also would later
claim to have loved Zabaleta.[10]

After being seen drunk in the company of various pubescent youths of "humble" appearance
by his friends Jairo Toro and Ancizar Valencia, Garavito's companions became aware of their
friend's pederasty. Despite this, the issue was never brought up to Garavito, and most of his
acquaintances did not suspect any odd sexual deviation. In addition, his various girlfriends
were also oblivious to Garavito's predilections. Starting in 1988, Garavito began
documenting his crimes, keeping them in black cloth suitcases at various females'
residences.[7]

1990s

Between 1980 and 1992, Garavito was estimated to have raped and tortured a minimum of
200 youths,[10] a period during which he had actively spent five years under psychiatric
care,[32] having attempted suicide several times.[23] Wherever Garavito had resided during
this time, reports of child molestation in said areas increased dramatically.[15]

While operating an ouija board, Garavito alleged that he entered a state of psychosis in
which the devil had asked whether he would like to serve him. Answering that he would, the
devil responded, saying, "Kill, that with killing many things may come."[17][15] Attempting to
commit his first murder on 1 October 1992 Garavito sought a young boy who had been
selling sweets and cigars to passersby. In a "state of drunkenness," he lured the youth—who
he planned on bringing to a wooded lot—to the Melia hotel sector in Bolivar, Colombia before
being interrupted and beaten by local police, one of whom hit him over the head with a
revolver. As Garavito bled, they then stole 100,000 pesos, a watch, and a ring from him
before letting him go from a police station.[33] Merely three days thereafter, Garavito sought
again to commit murder.

Committing his first murder of a boy named Juan Carlos on 4 October 1992,[30] Garavito
began to wear various disguises in order to evade identification and arrest. Known locally as
"Goofy," a generous man who gave to children in Trujillo, the locals had gone out of their way
to keep documents for Garavito.[7] For years, Garavito had been documenting his crimes by
tickets, receipts, clothes, and identity cards of victims in a black cloth suitcase; Garavito left
the suitcase with his sister Esther before giving it to Luz Mary.[34] He also collected their
amputated toes, before disposing of them for fear that the Colombian National Police's scent
dog team may trace them to him.[15] In June 1996, Garavito would complain to Luz Mary of
losing his temporary job as a salesman for air fresheners, and beg for a place to stay in
exchange for food and financial relief. Luz Mary was wary of Garavito for his alcoholism and
temper, but took him in briefly; Garavito would then suffer from a hard fall in the
Guacamayas neighborhood of Bogotá, and subsequently break his leg in August 1996.
Stricken with pain, he resided temporarily with a man before begging his girlfriend Luz Mary
to let him stay at her residence again;[6] restricted by having to use crutches, wear a neck
brace, and a cast, Garavito resorted to begging on the street for the two months he resided
with her.[27]

Garavito provided for the household by paying for meals and other means, such as bringing
a television. Despite this, Garavito was still hostile and entered a fight with his girlfriend's 15-
year-old son for wanting to watch the local news. Luz Mary subsequently evicted Garavito,
who derided her son as disrespectful and rude, and had also damaged a gold chain she had
gifted to him. Later that year on Christmas Day, Luz Mary would receive a gift from a visiting
friend, which prompted an angry, drunken phone call from Garavito in which he stated that
he "didn't like those faggots" visiting as he feared they would steal her generosity from
Garavito. After being informed that he was no longer welcome, Garavito appeared the next
morning shouting obscenities and threats, and grabbing at Luz Mary's throat; Luz Mary and
her family hid at a neighbor's house in response for the time being. After several hours,
Garavito left an apology note asking for her forgiveness, and noting his "damage" to their
household.[27] Nicknamed "Conflict" by locals,[23] Garavito was frequently seen drunk and
would drift from town to town as he outwore his welcome, often due to his domestic
disputes with co-workers, abuse of his girlfriends, and general inability to behave normally.
His erratic behavior had left him unable to develop meaningful relationships, despite living
with two different women in Pereira at the time of his arrest.[25]

Toward the end of Garavito's crime spree, he would roam the west Colombian region as a
homeless drifter. Wary of murdering minors who he felt were much too easy to lure, Garavito
developed plans to eventually commit a mass murder in which he would kidnap several
adults and murder them as he attracted the attention of journalists, possibly dying in the
frenzy.[10] Nevertheless, before he could carry his plan out, Garavito would be detained for
the attempted sexual assault of 12-year-old John Iván Sabogal on 22 April 1999.

Murders

A prolific pederast and torturer of youths,[10] Garavito began to feel apathy with his crimes.
On 4 October 1992, he had spotted 13-year-old boy Juan Carlos walking near a bazaar he
had been drinking at. According to Garavito, the reflection of the moonlight had invoked a
"strange force" within him, reminding him of his childhood which compelled him to murder
upon entering a state of rage.[17] He began to follow the child, buying synthetic rope and a
butcher knife on the way, before offering him work for 500 or 1,000 pesos. The boy left the
crowded area in Jamundí with Garavito to go to a remote area near the local railroad, where
he was later found with his front teeth knocked out, severe cuts to his rectum and throat and
his genitals severed. Waking upon sunrise, Garavito began sobbing as he noted the blood
stains of Carlos on his clothes.[6][n 4]

On 10 October 1992, Garavito would make the trip to Trujillo to see his sister Esther.
Attempting to control his urges by drinking brandy, he began breaking containers in a state
of rage after seeing a child pass by. Garavito then murdered 12-year-old Jhon Alexander
Peñaranda on the way to his sister's residence while in Tuluá. He then began to compulsively
murder youth, predominately male and poverty-stricken, and collected their amputated toes.
In 1993, Garavito also began cutting into his victims' bellies, luring eight youths aged 9 to 11
from a local school to a nearby wooded lot in the La Victoria district. For fear of being traced
by bloodhounds, Garavito then discarded their amputated toes before murdering Henry
Giovanni García, Marco Aurelio Castaño, Juan David Cárdenas, Jaime Orlando Popayán, and
three more unidentified children in southeast Bogotá. He then murdered two additional
children in the Meissen neighborhood, before departing for Tuluá, to Pereira, to Quimbaya,
then to Tuluá again where he murdered more children, ending his spree in 1993 with the
death of 13-year-old Mauricio Monedero Mejía.[15]

In early 1994, Garavito would lure a Bogotá youth—estimated to be about 12 years old—who
had fallen asleep on the bus. After providing him with brandy, Garavito proceeded to strip
and bind the boy at a secluded ravine spot in a dazed state before noticing a foul odour; he
then let the child go after discovering the source of the odour was a mass grave.
Immediately, the child seized the knife, severing Garavito's tendons in his left hand with the
weapon before being overpowered and murdered by him. On 4 February 1994, Garavito
would lure 13-year-old Jaime Andrés González from the Plaza de Bolívar to a sugarcane
field shortly after being expelled from a bar that night for complaining of their food; noting a
crucifix in the area, he entered a brief psychosis in which he buried his knife, prayed for
forgiveness, retrieved the knife and returned to his hotel room to chant scripture from the
fifty-seventh psalm for several hours until dawn. On 12 January 1997, Garavito murdered an
8-year-old boy, before murdering an additional two minors during this period.[15]

The victims were almost exclusively boys, though Garavito has also been noted by local
media to have molested and murdered female victims.[35][18] In addition to his 172 initial
charges of murder, Garavito also confessed to 28 more murders in 2003, of which 5 were
adult. All adult victims were thought to have been killed to rid Garavito of potential witnesses
rather than to fulfill personal fantasy.[13]

Murders abroad

Garavito was also said to have operated in Ecuador during the summer of 1998, when he
murdered 14-year-old Abel Gustavo Loor Vélez, a local shoe-shiner and paper boy on 20
July 1998 and 12-year-old Jimmy Leonardo Palacios Anchundia in Chone, Ecuador. Both
boys were from poor families, and disappeared at noon. Garavito was subsequently spotted
at an all-girls' school in Santo Domingo, Ecuador before fleeing Ecuadorian authorities who
had been setting up an operation to catch him.[6] There they found two corpses, one of
whom was a young girl who had been raped, tortured, murdered, and discarded in similar
fashion to that of Garavito's modus operandi.[11] Marked for his thick Colombian accent,
locals spotted a foreign drifter begging for money in July and August of that year. In addition,
Garavito also stated that he had allegedly committed murder in Venezuela.[6]

Surviving victims

William Trujillo

In 1979, Garavito, wielding a machete, seized victim 9-year-old William Trujillo Mora (who
was interviewed and featured on the Colombian television program Los Informantes) in the
Valle del Cauca region as he was about to join other playing children, hugging him and
threatening to kill him if he screamed. Mora obliged, and he was escorted by Garavito to an
abandoned building where he was sexually molested and tortured for 12 hours. When
Garavito sensed that someone was near the house, he urged the child to remain silent.[36]
When Garavito lost consciousness from drinking, Mora exited the building.

Unidentified youth

In 1988, Garavito lured an unidentified victim who he had sexually assaulted near a
restaurant called El Arepazo in the Alto del Río sector, in Quindío's Calarcá, a location where
several bodies were later found within a 20-metre proximity of one another. Following an
earthquake on 25 January 1999 authorities found the owner of the restaurant—which was
reduced to rubble—who pointed them to Garavito, whom he had known for many years and
avoided due to his drinking problem and aggressive tendencies.[7]

Carlos Alberto

In the early 1990s, Garavito would approach 10-year-old Carlos Alberto in the Circasia
sector of Quindío. Offering him gifts and 200 pesos in exchange for work, Garavito led Carlos
to the Alto de la Taza where he amicably spoke with the child. Upon reaching a secluded hill
spot, Garavito placed a knife at Carlos' throat before proceeding to bind, rape, and torture
him. After doing so, Garavito asked Carlos whether he enjoyed it. Humiliated and fearful of
Garavito, Carlos stated that he liked it, prompting Garavito to leave after stating, "See you
next week. That's how I like it, that you [also] like it."[7]

Brand Ferney Bernal Álvarez


Brand Ferney Bernal Álvarez was a 16-year-old youth who worked with his father in the
rooster fighting business in the 1990s. While Bernal Álvarez tended to roosters in the cockpit,
Garavito took him to a secluded spot by threatening him with a knife. He then proceeded to
bind, sexually assault and torture Bernal Álvarez, with methods ranging from stabbing
Bernal Álvarez seven times with a screwdriver as he raped him, to beating the youth until
weak. Bernal Álvarez broke free from his restraints and fled from Garavito.[37][10]

Modus operandi

According to Garavito, he primarily targeted children of humble background who had light
coloured eyes and were working class, homeless, peasants or orphaned. Claiming to feel a
force within that compelled him to kill, Garavito would look for children and lure them away
by bribing them with small gifts such as money, candy or odd jobs.[38] Terrified of the dark, he
would approach them in broad daylight in public places ranging from the countryside to
crowded city streets. He would also wait and drink brandy near school zones on evenings to
wait for unknowing children.[6]

He had a preference for male youth with light-coloured eyes and fair complexion. Having
been raised in the heavily Spanish-descended Paisa region of Colombia, Garavito knew
where to find boys that fit his criteria.[29] He offered easy work for money and even disguised
himself as different characters who could be seen as legitimately having reason to interact
with children, such as a priest, monk, farmer, homeless man, street vendor, fortune teller,
baker, drug dealer, schoolteacher, charity organization worker, bar and restaurant manager,
elderly man and a gambler.[10] He often posed as a monk or priest (one of his many
nicknames in Colombian media was "El Cura") and lured children with promises of money or
drinks.[39] To prevent suspicions about his activities from developing, Garavito would change
his disguise often.

Once he had the trust of a child, Garavito would walk to a secluded spot or mass grave site
with the victim, encouraging them to talk about their personal life until they were tired and
vulnerable, which then made them easy to handle. After sipping about half a bottle of
brandy, Garavito would proceed to bind the child, intimidating them with a knife as he
fondled and sometimes masturbated over them.[7] According to Garavito, he made a "pact
with the devil" and Satanic rituals were also incorporated into the murders of the children,
who were apparent blood sacrifices.[15]
Usually, the child would endure prolonged rape and torture by having the hands, feet and
buttocks stabbed with a screwdriver. Garavito was also known to place broken blades in
between his fingers, and flay the skin of the child's buttocks.[7] Teeth were often knocked out
and sharpened objects inserted into the anus. The penis and testicles were also often
severed and placed into the child's mouth while alive. They were burned with a lighter,
stomped on and often showed deep cuts in the back, belly and throat. In some cases, they
were sexually abused as their intestines poured out of their belly,[15] impaled through the
anus and out of the mouth,[29] and stabbed over one hundred times.[14]

Garavito's climax would occur when he had decapitated the child alive or cut the throat as he
finished before leaving the severed genitals in the mouth of the decapitated head.[15][40]
Necrophilia with the victim's corpse was also occasionally involved in the crimes; sometimes
prematurely, as Garavito could only achieve orgasm by beating and stabbing his victims
during intercourse.[10] The bodies of the children were all found completely naked, and all
bore bite marks and signs of anal penetration. Containers of lubricant were found near the
bodies, along with empty bottles of the cheapest brandy in Colombia. Most corpses showed
signs of prolonged torture.[41]

Investigation

Garavito wearing the glasses that he would leave behind in Palmira


Beginning in October 1992, minors between the ages of 6 through 16 began disappearing
rapidly from the streets of Colombia. Due to the decades-long civil war, many children in
Colombia were impoverished and unlikely to be reported missing. Several women began
reporting their children missing, and a group of children discovered a skeleton in Pereira
while playing football on 7 November 1998, yet authorities did not take much notice until 15
November, when mass graves of as many as 36 children were uncovered—almost all of them
boys—with signs of binding, sexual assault, and prolonged torture.[23][38] They discovered a
total of 41 children in the department of Risaralda, with 27 children discovered in
neighboring Valle del Cauca.[42]

This large number of missing children called for a widespread investigation as these killings
were not confined to a specific area. The brutality was so fierce to authorities that they
initially hypothesized the killings were performed by a Satanic cult or an international child-
trafficking ring. In spite of this, the Prosecutor's Office quickly speculated that it was likely
one man to be responsible for the killings, due to the prevalence of nylon cord and liquor
bottle caps found at all of the crime scenes.[23] On 6 February 1999, outside the town of
Palmira, the bodies of two naked children were found lying next to each other on a hill near a
sugarcane field. The next day, only meters away, they discovered another child's body. All
three bodies had their hands bound and bore signs of sexual abuse. The victims' necks were
severely cut and bruises were on their backs, genitals, legs and buttocks. The murder
weapon was found in the same area as the bodies. Garavito had passed out partially naked
on top of a child's corpse while drunk with a cigarette in his left hand,[43][25] causing the cane
field to catch fire. He burned himself severely in the process and left behind his money, burnt
glasses, shorts, shoes, and underwear. Receipts and a note containing Graciela Zabaleta's
address was also found.[24]

From his glasses, the authorities were able to determine that the local serial killer was
middle-aged and had an astigmatism in his left eye. His shoes also showed that he walked
with a limp and stood 163–167 cm (5 ft 4 in – 5 ft 6 in) tall. They falsely arrested a local sex
offender named Pedro Pablo Ramirez Garcia, who was 44 and had a limp in his right foot. As
two boys disappeared in Pereira, a young boy had outed Garcia as the man who attempted
to assault him. He was kept in jail until more children began to disappear in Bogotá.
Meanwhile, Aldemar Duran, the main detective, had begun to suspect Garavito as their
wanted killer. Garavito's girlfriend was contacted; she told police that she had not seen him
in months. She did, however, give to the police a black cloth suitcase that Garavito had left in
her possession, which contained a number of his belongings. These items included pictures
of young boys, detailed journals of his murders, tally marks of his victims and bills. This new
information led them to Garavito's residence, but the property was vacant. Detectives
believed that Garavito was either travelling for work or away attempting to find his next
victim. Garcia was released after Duran was able to track down the girlfriend and sister of
Garavito.[21]

Arrest

Garavito was picked up by the local police just a few days later on an unrelated charge of
attempted rape against 12-year-old John Iván Sabogal. On 22 April 1999, Garavito was
drinking brandy in the evening when he encountered Sabogal selling lottery tickets in the city
of Villavicencio. Introducing himself as Bonifacio Morera Lizcano, a local politician,[44]
Garavito proceeded to seize Sabogal with a knife before threatening the child into silence.
Pretending to hug Sabogal, Garavito escorted him into a taxi before forcing him to climb a
barbed wire fence that led to a secluded hillside. At this location, Garavito proceeded to bind
Sabogal while repeatedly screaming, "Am I a sadist?"[22] He then taunted the child with the
blade, shouting various obscenities as he masturbated over him.[45]

A homeless 16-year-old had been close enough to hear the struggle between Garavito and
the child. The teen began to curse and throw stones at Garavito. Garavito chased the
teenager with his dagger. Both the boy and the teen fled to the Rosa Blanca farmhouse
located on La Coralina Road in Villavicencio,[46][9] where they were met by a 12-year-old girl.
Garavito later reached the farmhouse, aggressively asking the girl for directions. She directed
Garavito into the woods, where he became lost. The police were contacted, resulting in a
search. Authorities found Garavito walking out of the woods at approximately 7:00 p.m. as
they urged angry locals not to get involved in the search. He gave them a false ID and
claimed to be the politician Lizcano. Despite this, they suspected the man to be Garavito
anyway.[46] On 4 July 1999, their suspicion was confirmed.[44]

For Colombia's Justice Department, Garavito's confession was not enough. Garavito had an
eye condition that was rare and only found in men in a particular age group. His glasses
were specifically designed for his unique condition. These particular glasses were found at a
crime scene. Garavito also left behind bottles of brandy, his underwear and his shoes. DNA
was found on the victims, along with the other items left behind. Police scheduled the entire
jail where Garavito was being detained to get an eye exam, the outcome of which would
help police pair the glasses to Garavito. By making it mandatory for all the prisoners, it
reduced Garavito's suspicion and kept him from lying about his eyesight.[24] His height of
165 cm (5 ft 5 in) and limp were also crucial in connecting him to the investigators' findings.

While Garavito was out of his cell, detectives took DNA samples from his pillow and living
area. The DNA found on the victims was a match to the DNA found in Garavito's cell.
Garavito confessed to murdering about 140 children and was charged with killing 172
altogether throughout Colombia.[47] He was found guilty on 138 of the 172 accounts; the
others are ongoing. Garavito was sentenced to 1,853 years and 9 days in prison, the
lengthiest sentence in Colombian history.[48] However, Colombian law limits imprisonment to
40 years, and, because Garavito helped police find the victims' bodies, his sentence was
further reduced to 22 years.[49]

Garavito is currently serving his sentence in a maximum-security prison in Valledupar in the


department of El Cesar in Colombia.[50] He is held separately from all other prisoners
because it is feared that he would be killed immediately. He will become eligible for parole in
2023[51] when he has served three quarters of his sentence.[51]

Garavito remains hopeful, having expressed to Colombian senator Carlos Moreno de Caro
apparent plans to enter Colombian congress, enter the ministry as a Pentecostal pastor, and
marry a woman (in rejection of his self-admitted homosexuality) in the hopes that he will be
able to help abused children upon his release.[52] Garavito suffers from severe eye cancer
which leaves him weak and fatigued, requiring daily blood transfusions. He spends most of
his time making handcuffs, earrings and necklaces in the medical unit of Valledupar's
prison.[18]

Public response

Many Colombians criticized the possibility of Garavito's early release. In recent years,
Colombians have increasingly felt that Garavito's sentence was not sufficient punishment for
his crimes. Some have argued he deserves either life in prison or the death penalty, neither of
which exist in Colombia. Colombian law had no provision or method to impose a sentence
longer than what Garavito received, which was seen as a deficiency in the law caused by the
failure to address the possibility of a serial killer in Colombian society. The law has since
increased the maximum penalty for such crimes to 60 years in prison.[53]

Journalist Guillermo Prieto "Pirry" La Rotta interviewed Garavito for a show which was
broadcast on 11 June 2006. Pirry mentioned that, during the interview, Garavito tried to
minimize his actions and expressed intent to start a political career in order to help abused
children. Pirry also described Garavito's conditions in prison and commented that due to
good behavior, he could probably apply for early release within three years.

See also

List of serial killers by number of victims

Pedro López (serial killer)

Manuel Octavio Bermúdez

Notes
1. Garavito would later insist that his fondling of his siblings was so insignificant that they possibly
did not remember it as adults.[15]

2. Blaming it on the sexual abuse he endured as a youth, Garavito would recall feeling shame at not
being able to feel aroused enough by the experience.[16]

3. Several of Garavito's family members were alcoholics, with a maternal grandfather dying of
cirrhosis in his youth.

4. Garavito would also allege feelings of guilt as he saw the murder of Carlos mentioned in the local
newspapers on 7 October 1998.[6]

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45. Cañas 2012, pp. 44–45

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Last edited 6 days ago by Oopsemoops

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