Chicago Sun-Times

FREED FROM PRISON, PAIR WANT CPD HELP WITH VISAS

- BY ANDY GRIMM Staff Reporter Email: agrimm@suntimes.com Twitter: @ agrimm34

Two men who were freed from prison after a Cook County judge ruled they were likely beaten into confessing to a 1998 double murder now want the Chicago Police and state’s attorney to help them get visas reserved for crime victims.

Arturo DeLeon- Reyes and Gabriel Solache were released from prison in December after prosecutor­s dropped the case against them.

But the two men — who entered the U. S. illegally from Mexico years before they were arrested for the murders of Mariano and Jacinta Soto — were immediatel­y handed off to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agents and shipped to detention facilities.

Now, both men want help from law enforcemen­t to help them obtain a “U visa,” which would allow them to stay in the country based on their status as crime victims. The crime, immigratio­n attorney VanHuynh said, was that the two men were beaten by CPD detective Reynaldo Guevara.

“The crime here would be either torture or wrongful imprisonme­nt,” Huynh, said at a press conference Monday outside the Thompson Center. “Signing a certificat­ion . . . will state the facts of this case and recognize the torture that both men were subject to.”

The two men are among the 14 defendants whose conviction­s have been overturned based on allegation­s of abuse or misconduct by Guevara, who worked as a gang detective on the Northwest Side for decades.

Guevara, who in recent years has refused to testify under oath about the allegation­s, last year took the witness stand in the Solache and DeLeon- Reyes case with a grant of immunity from State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s office and federal prosecutor­s.

Guevara testified that he could not remember virtually anything about the Soto case but denied hitting either Solache or DeLeonReye­s during their interrogat­ions or falsifying their statements confessing to the crime.

Prosecutor­s grudgingly dropped the case and maintained that Solache and DeLeon- Reyes still were guilty of the crime, making it seem unlikely that they would be willing to aid the two men’s case.

Chicago Police might also have reason not to endorse the men’s claims of abuse: DeLeon- Reyes in February filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the CPD and Guevara.

DeLeon- Reyes returned voluntaril­y to Mexico in December, and an immigratio­n court judge in January granted Solache bond.

ICE officials have summoned Solache for an interview on April 2, and Huynh said she is concerned he may again be taken into custody if he isn’t granted a visa.

Solache, who spent 20 years in prison, including two on death row, said he would like to be able to travel freely in the U. S. and to Mexico while settling his affairs.

“I was a victim of violence by Det. Reynaldo Guevara. I want to return to my home country, but first I would like to take care of my business here without worrying about immigratio­n,” Solache said. “After all I’ve been through, I think I deserve that.”

 ?? | ANDY GRIMM/ SUN- TIMES ?? Gabriel Solache said Monday hewants to be able to travel freely in the United States and Mexico.
| ANDY GRIMM/ SUN- TIMES Gabriel Solache said Monday hewants to be able to travel freely in the United States and Mexico.
 ??  ?? Reynaldo Guevara
Reynaldo Guevara

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