The Denver Post

Retired officer locates escapee

Cinquanta was tracking man who shot him in 1971

- By Allyson Waller

Daril Cinquanta, a retired Denver police officer, never forgot the man who shot him while he was on duty in 1971. So when the man, Luis Archuleta, escaped from prison in 1974, Cinquanta made it his mission to track him down.

He spent years calling contacts hoping to develop leads on Archuleta’s whereabout­s. In the 1980s, informatio­n led him to believe that Archuleta was in San Jose, Calif., but it was a dead end. Archuleta’s escape was even highlighte­d on the television show “America’s Most Wanted.”

Cinquanta’s persistenc­e paid off after nearly 50 years when he got an anonymous call June 24 suggesting that he look up a name: Ramon Montoya.

The caller believed that the fugitive who shot Cinquanta was going by that name, and provided an address in Española, N.M., about 25 miles north of Santa Fe.

A search revealed that Montoya had been charged in 2011 with drunken driving. When Cinquanta searched the arrest, the person in the mug shot looking back at him was a considerab­ly older Archuleta.

Acting on informatio­n Cinquanta shared with the Española Police Department and the FBI, authoritie­s on Aug. 5 arrested Archuleta, 77, who was also known as Larry Pusateri.

Archuleta had been living under the alias Ramon Montoya for almost 40 years, the FBI said. He lived in a modest Española home that he shared with a woman, authoritie­s said.

The Santa Fe New Mexican reported that many of the people in Archuleta’s neighborho­od knew little about a Ramon Montoya.

“I told people it was like a

hobby,” Cinquanta, 72, said of his efforts to find his assailant. “I mean it kind of was. He shot me, he was dangerous and he was out there.”

When Cinquanta and Archuleta’s paths first crossed on Oct. 2, 1971, Cinquanta — then a rookie officer — spotted Archuleta in a car with two women.

To him, Archuleta looked “like a bad guy,” he recalled.

Indeed, five months earlier, Archuleta had been serving a sentence for burglary and drug possession conviction­s but had escaped from a California Department of Correction­s prison “after putting dummies in the form of blankets and pillows in his bed,” according to an FBI affidavit.

Cinquanta confronted Archuleta, requested his identifica­tion and asked him to get out of the vehicle.

The two walked to the back of Archuleta’s car, where Archuleta pulled a gun from his waistband. The officer tried to reach for it, and as the two men struggled, Archuleta shot Cinquanta in the stomach.

Archuleta fled.

“Back in those days, we didn’t have bulletproo­f vests, nor did we have radios that came out of the car,” Cinquanta said. “So I had to crawl to the car to call for help.”

An FBI affidavit tells a sweeping story of Archuleta’s return to Colorado, and later, his second escape from confinemen­t.

Authoritie­s found Archuleta months later, after he was arrested in Mexico on drug-traffickin­g charges. As he was being booked, officials learned of his warrants in the United States. In 1973, he was convicted of assault with a deadly weapon of a police officer and sentenced to up to 14 years in prison.

Nearly 17 months later, Archuleta escaped from a state hospital in Pueblo with another inmate, Sidney Riley.

Archuleta and Riley, along with three other inmates, were transporte­d to the hospital for medical appointmen­ts. Riley asked to go to the restroom multiple times when they arrived, the FBI affidavit said.

Archuleta was given permission to go to the restroom but never returned. A correction­al officer who went to check on him was met by Archuleta, who pointed a gun at the officer. Riley threatened another officer with a gun, and the two inmates fled in a brown sedan.

“This escape was like something out of a Hollywood movie,” Cinquanta said.

Cinquanta said local and state authoritie­s exhausted their resources in searching for Archuleta and eventually sought federal help. (Riley was apprehende­d four days after the escape.)

After Cinquanta’s tip in June, FBI agents interviewe­d a woman, who identified herself as Archuleta’s ex-wife, and Archuleta’s son. Both knew Archuleta as Ramon Montoya, according to the FBI affidavit.

Authoritie­s showed them a picture of Archuleta on an FBI wanted poster from 1978, and the two confirmed it was the man they knew as Ramon Montoya.

His son, Mario Montoya, said his father told him that he was wanted and that his real last name was Pusateri, the affidavit said.

Archuleta appeared in federal court, and arrangemen­ts were being made for him to be taken into state custody in Colorado.

Cinquanta was a well-known Denver officer who chronicled his life in law enforcemen­t in a book, “The Blue Chameleon: The Life Story of a Supercop,” but his career was not without controvers­y.

In 1989, Cinquanta and another officer were placed on unpaid leave after being charged with 17 counts for “allegedly setting up crimes to entrap suspects,” The Denver Post reported.

Cinquanta, who pleaded guilty to two counts of first-degree misconduct, said the charges were “garbage,” and called the accusation­s untrue.

“Those felonies never stuck,” he said Sunday. “It was ridiculous. It really was.”

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