Alejo Maldonado

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Alejo Maldonado (born 1938) is a Puerto Rican former policeman who was convicted, in 1982, with charges of corruption and kidnapping. According to police records, he was involved in the kidnapping of one Mario Consuegra.

A public servant with an apparently perfect service record, Maldonado became leader of the (CIB) Mafia chief inside the Puerto Rico State Police LTCol of the Criminal Investigations Bureau.

Maldonado allegedly became a criminal around 1972. In 1974, he met a woman, whose name he refuses to identify in public. He has called this woman the love of his life.

Maldonado became infamous across Puerto Rico after he was arrested in 1982. In what became a wide media scandal, Maldonado openly spoke about corruption in the Puerto Rican police, connections with the Puerto Rican mafia, murders and robberies committed by policemen.

After a court case that would be closely followed by Puerto Rican newspapers and television through most of the middle 1980s, Maldonado received a sentence, in June 1983, of 40 years in prison.

Maldonado flew on July 1 of that year to New York, to begin his jail term there. He would be transferred to other American jails, describing his experience at the Louisville, Kentucky jail as the worst one he lived through.

In jail, he became a librarian, and he learned that, with good behavior, his sentence could be reduced to 26 years. He also learned that, under current laws, he could be sentenced to only 8 years in jail for the same charges that he was sentenced for two decades ago.

Maldonado was in charge of lending prisoners books, and, in some cases, of teaching them from those books.

He also learned fluent English during his stint there.

Maldonado was released on December of 2004. During an interview with El Vocero, he expressed anger at the way that society perceives people who have been in jail. He said that he felt it was right to greet people who went to jail for defending Vieques upon return to their communities, but that it has been hard for him to find a job to support his family after he was released.

He also told El Vocero that he feels that the things he declared about police corruption in Puerto Rico were necessary for the general public there to know about.

Maldonado returned to regular society choosing to lead a quieter life. He still lives with the same woman he met in 1974, and had his interview with El Vocero conducted at an unspecified place in Isla Verde. The interview was published on February 22, 2005, and it made the publication's headlines.

Criminal Associates of Alejo Maldonado:

Cesar Caballero: Right hand of alejo Maldonado, non-law enforcement officer.

William Pacheco: Former sub-director of CIB, former district attorney, lawyer without a title, ex convict, served two years in federal prison for conspiracy in the Delta case.

"Chiquito Perez": Drug Dealer.

Jose Miguel Battle (Fat Guy): Former Police (Vice Squad) from Habana Cuba. Often Called the Cuban Godfather.

Eugene Hudders Montes: CIB Director, Former intelligence officer in the US Forces.

Salvador T. Roig: Puerto Rico State Police Superindentent, sworn in by Governor Sanchez Vilella.

Luis Maldonado Trinidad: CIB Director, replacing Hudders.

by Robert Velez


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