The Guardian (Charlottetown)

El Salvador’s House of Horrors killings shock nation numbed to violenc

Country has long had one of the highest rates of violent crime in the world

- CASSANDRA GARRISON NELSON RENTERIA

CHALCHUAPA, El Salvador — Neighbours knew something was wrong in that squat green house when a young woman’s screams pierced the quiet of their neighborho­od in Chalchuapa, a small town about 80 kilometers from San Salvador, this nation’s capital.

Jacquelinn­e Palomo Lima, 26, and her mother had been lured to the windowless dwelling by the man who lived there – 51-year-old former policeman Hugo Osorio - who had promised them informatio­n about Palomo’s missing brother, Alexis, a family member told Reuters.

Neighbors called police when they heard Palomo’s screams on the night of May 7 as she fled the home only to be overtaken by Osorio, who allegedly hit her in the head with a metal pipe and dragged her back inside. By the time authoritie­s arrived, the bodies of Palomo, her brother and her mother were found, along with another 14 corpses initially discovered in a mass grave behind the home, Justice and Security Minister Gustavo Villatoro told journalist­s on May 20.

El Salvador has long had one of the highest rates of violent crime in the world. But even in this country inured to mayhem, the Osorio case has shocked the public. Local media have dubbed the dwelling the “House of Horrors.”

There were many more bodies buried on the property, Osorio allegedly told police in a confession published June 12 by Salvadoran digital outlet Revista Factum. There could be up to 40 bodies total in several graves, according to investigat­ors, Factum said. The publicatio­n took down that report two days later after El Salvador’s Attorney General obtained a court order forcing it to do so.

Reuters was unable to reach Osorio or a lawyer for him, and could not independen­tly verify the authentici­ty of the alleged confession. The Attorney General’s office declined to comment, saying the case was confidenti­al.

Osorio was charged on May 12 on two counts of femicide, a term used for killings that deliberate­ly target women; prosecutor­s later added two counts of homicide. At least nine other people have also been charged with aggravated homicide and femicide in connection with the slayings.

In exchange for his testimony and collaborat­ion in nine of the cases involving other alleged accomplice­s, prosecutor­s offered Osorio a deal they referred to as “opportunit­y of partiality,” they said in a news conference on May 21. They provided no other informatio­n about that agreement.

The Attorney General’s office and the office of the public defender did not share the name of Osorio’s attorney when asked by Reuters. All court records have been sealed.

The macabre discovery has sent a chill through a nation that’s no stranger to brutality. This country of 6.7 million has seen more than

its fair share of atrocities over the past four decades through civil war, endemic gang violence and periodic crackdowns by police and the military.

Authoritie­s have portrayed Osorio as an opportunis­t who preyed on the vulnerable. According to details of Osorio’s alleged confession, he purportedl­y admitted targeting mostly poor women and girls, luring them to his home with the promise of jobs or help in migrating to the United States. Villatoro, the security minister, called him a “psychopath.”

But Osorio’s law enforcemen­t background, the large number of potential accomplice­s, and the dearth of public informatio­n about the case have some Salvadoran­s unsure of what to believe.

Exhumation of the bodies in Chalchuapa concluded this month, Villatoro said in a news conference on July 14. He did not disclose the total number of victims, and public officials have from the start provided conflictin­g accounts

of the tally. Israel Ticas, a criminolog­ist in charge of the investigat­ion, was sanctioned by the government for suggesting to the media there could be at least 40 victims - informatio­n that Attorney General Rodolfo Delgado dismissed as unproven.

Ticas did not respond to a request for comment.

Jose de la Cruz, Palomo’s 79-year-old grandfathe­r, said the trail of blood his granddaugh­ter left leading to Osorio’s door is the only reason his slain family members were discovered.

“If it had not been for her, I would still be looking for them,” he told Reuters.

More than 90 per cent of 1,000 Salvadoran­s polled said they had little or no trust in government institutio­ns, according to a 2020 survey by global corruption monitor Transparen­cy Internatio­nal.

‘I WANT TO FIND OUT’

El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele has said little about the killings since late May. He has

instead touted his administra­tion’s “Territoria­l Control Plan” aimed at dismantlin­g gangs and organized crime through the use of the military.

The government said there were 1,322 homicides in El Salvador in 2020, an 80 per cent drop from five years earlier. Former Security Minister Rogelio Rivas cited a 61 per cent drop in femicides in the first six months of 2020, compared to the first half of 2019.

Some human-rights groups have questioned the veracity of the administra­tion’s claims of dramatic declines in crime. El Salvador saw 59 women murdered in the first four months of 2021, a 27 per cent increase from the same period a year earlier, the non-profit Organizati­on of Salvadoran Women for Peace said, citing data from the Institute of Forensic Medicine, an arm of the Supreme Court.

El Salvador’s National Police and Ministry of Justice and Security did not respond to requests for comment.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Salvador’s soldier secures the perimeter of the site where authoritie­s were excavating a clandestin­e mass grave discovered at a house of a former police officer containing many bodies, most of them believed to be women in Chalchuapa, El Salvador.
REUTERS A Salvador’s soldier secures the perimeter of the site where authoritie­s were excavating a clandestin­e mass grave discovered at a house of a former police officer containing many bodies, most of them believed to be women in Chalchuapa, El Salvador.

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