The Mercury News Weekend

Puerto Rico fears surge in murders: 11 days, 32 slain

- By Danica Coto

CAROLINA, PUERTO RICO » Before the sun rose on the first day of 2018, someone called 911 to report the charred, bullet-riddled body of aman with a snakelike tattoo on his left hand, lying beside a road in the Puerto Rican town of Vega Baja.

The next day, two men were found dead with their feet and hands bound in Bayamon, a working- class city southwest of the capital. Another man was shot to death before dawn in nearby Vega Baja while trying to stop thieves from stealing his generator.

Thirty-two people have been slain in Puerto Rico in the first 11 days of the year, double the number killed over the same period in 2017. If the surge proves to be more than just a temporary blip, January could be the most homicidal month on the island in at least two years, adding a dangerous new element to the island’s recovery from Hurricane Maria, its worst disaster in decades.

While the number of homicides did not immediatel­y spike in the weeks after the hurricane struck on Sept. 20, police and independen­t experts say many killings appear at least partly related to its aftereffec­ts.

The storm has plunged much of the island into darkness, increased economic hardship and contribute­d to a sickout by police, all fueling lawlessnes­s. What’s more, officials say a turf war has broken out among drug gangs looking to grab territory after the storm’s disruption.

Already bankrupt, the island’s overwhelme­d government has fallen behind with millions of dollars in overtime payments owed to police officers, who have begun calling in sick in big numbers to protest. The sickout has taken about 2,000 police off the street each day in a territory that has 13,600 officers. It has forced more than a dozen police stations to close for several hours to a couple of days during the holiday period because of a lack of officers. No arrests have been made in the 32 killings.

Maria, which hit as a Category 4 storm, destroyed much of the island’s electrical grid. For those police on duty, the streets are darker and more dangerous because power has been restored to only 60 percent of customers in the U.S. territory. Drug gangs are fighting to re- establish territory they lost in the disruption from Maria, which pushed thousands from their homes and left entire neighborho­ods uninhabita­ble for weeks.

Police Chief Michelle Her- nandez resigned Monday after only a year on the job, and local and federal officials are rushing from meeting to meeting to debate how to protect 3.3 million Puerto Ricans, especially those living in the dark.

“This has been devastatin­g,” said Ramon Santiago, a retiree who lives less than a block from where three bodies were discovered Sunday near a basketball court. “You can’t sleep peacefully in so much darkness.”

Puerto Rico’s homicide rate is roughly 20 killings per 100,000 residents, compared with 3.7 per 100,000 residents on the U.S. mainland. In the last two years, Puerto Rico has seen an average of 56 homicides a month, a rate that held through December. Then after New Year’s, the killings started accelerati­ng.

A man was shot Jan. 3 by a security guard while trying to rob a bakery. Two double homicides were reported Jan. 8 — two men found shot to death in a car near an upscale resort on the north coast and two other men discovered sprawled on the street near a public housing complex on the west coast. Five killings were reported Monday. Three people were wounded by gunfire in a shootout that night in the parking lot of a strip mall in Bayamon.

This week, police say, the son of a former judge was killed after trying to write down the license plate number of a car whose occupants were firing a gun.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States