Pedro López (serial killer)
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Pedro López | |
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Born | October 8, 1948 Santa Isabel, Colombia |
Penalty | Life imprisonment |
Status | Living |
Pedro Alonso López (born 8 October 1948 in Santa Isabel, Colombia) is a confessed serial killer from South America, accused of killing more than 300 girls. Aside from un-cited local accounts of the crimes, Lopez’s crimes first received international attention from an interview conducted by Ron Laytner, a long time freelance photojournalist who first met Lopez in his Ambato Prison cell in 1980.
Laytner’s interviews were widely published, first in the Chicago Tribune on Sunday, July 13, 1980. Then they appeared in the Toronto Sun and the Sacramento Bee on July 21, 1980, along with many other North American papers and foreign publications over the years. Apart from Laytner’s account and two brief Associated Press wire reports[1] the story was published in The World's Most Infamous Murders by Boar and Blundell.[2]
According to Laytner’s story, [3] Lopez became known as the 'Monster of the Andes' in 1980 when he led police to the graves of 53 of his victims in Ecuador, all girls between nine and twelve years old. Then in 1983 he was found guilty of murdering 110 young girls in Ecuador alone and confessed to a further 240 murders of missing girls in neighboring Peru and Colombia.
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[edit] The López story
A basic version of the story is as follows:
López became notorious as the Monster of the Andes. According to López, his mother, a prostitute with 13 children, caught him fondling his younger sister in 1957 when he was eight years old, and evicted him from the family home. He was then picked up by a pedophile, taken to a deserted house and repeatedly sodomized. He was later taken in by an American family and enrolled in a school for orphans. He allegedly ran away either with a teacher from his school or because he was molested by a teacher. At 18, he was gang-raped in prison and, he claimed, killed three of the rapists while still incarcerated. After his jail term he started preying on young girls in Peru. He later claimed that, by 1978, he had killed over 100 of them. He had been caught by a native tribe, who were preparing to execute him when an American missionary intervened, and persuaded them to hand him over to the state police. The police soon released him. He relocated to Colombia and later Ecuador, killing about three girls a week. López later said "I like the girls in Ecuador, they are more gentle and trusting, more innocent." The authorities had previously believed the disappearance of so many girls was due to white slavery or prostitution. López was arrested when an attempted abduction went wrong and he was trapped by market traders. He confessed to over 300 murders. The police only believed him when a flash flood uncovered a mass grave of many of his victims.
Typical online sources are those such as Court TV's Crime Library.[4]
According to the BBC:[5] "He was arrested in 1980 but was freed by the government in Ecuador in the latter half of [1998] and deported to Colombia. In an interview from his prison cell, Lopez described himself as "the man of the century" and said he was being released for "good behaviour".
[edit] AP wire reports
Two AP wire reports from July 1980 and January 1981 are extant.[1] The first is a late report of López' arrest in March, and his confession to killing 103 girls, including 53 whose bodies had been found. The second reports that he was convicted of three murders, and had confessed to 300 sexual assaults and stranglings.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ a b AP Wire reports
- ^ The World's Most Infamous Murders by Roger Boar and Nigel Blundell - Octopus London 1983 ISBN 0600570088 pages 116-118
- ^ Edit International
- ^ Court TV's Crime Library's account of the López Story, including bibliography
- ^ BBC comment on release
[edit] Additional material
- A biography was shown on the History Channel and the Biography Channel.