Miami Herald

Triple murder suspect is dead; baby is missing

■ Ernesto Caballeiro took his 7-day-old son after killing the child’s mother, grandmothe­r, and great-grandmothe­r, police suspect. Caballeiro was found dead north of Tampa of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

- BY CHARLES RABIN, DAVID GOODHUE, DAVID OVALLE, AND CARLI TEPROFF crabin@miamiheral­d.com dgoodhue@miamiheral­d.com dovalle@miamiheral­d.com cteptroff@miamiheral­d.com

Ernesto Caballeiro — who police suspect abducted his 7-day-old son after shooting and killing the child’s mother, grandmothe­r, and greatgrand­mother — was found dead in a rural, wooded area just north of Tampa on Wednesday afternoon of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.

But the desperate statewide search by law enforcemen­t after the suicide and ghastly triple murder continued. Still missing was little Andrew, a child so young that survival on his own for any length of time seemed unlikely, police said.

“A newborn, obviously without parental care, every minute counts,” said Miami-Dade

Detective Christophe­r Sowerby-Thomas. “That’s why we’re reaching out to hospitals, schools, and other safe havens.”

Caballeiro, 49, was found dead just past noon Wednesday in a heavily wooded area about three miles from Interstate 75 near the town of Blanton, just north of Tampa in Pasco County. The white

van that police had been searching for was discovered about 50 yards away on the side of the road. A pacifier was found inside the van, police said.

Though there was no sign of Andrew, Pasco County Sheriff Chris Nocco added a new wrinkle, one that left at least a glimmer of hope that Andrew might still be alive.

Police found the van, he said, after someone called the Pasco sheriff’s office about a suspicious vehicle early Wednesday afternoon. A witness, he said, reported that there appeared to be a blonde woman inside the vehicle.

It wasn’t clear who that witness was, but the sheriff said officers were working to verify the report and create a sketch that could potentiall­y help lead to Andrew.

“I sit here and pray to God that it is true and that she has the baby,” said the sheriff. “If the woman is out there, please come forward. I promise you that all we care about is that the angel is OK.”

All afternoon Wednesday, police searched the area near the white van for the child, helicopter­s overhead, investigat­ors searching through and under brush, bloodhound­s trying to pick up a scent. But by early evening there was still no sign of Andrew.

Blanton is a rural community filled with vast ranches crisscross­ed by narrow two-lane roads.

The van was found on the side on an old, cracked stretch of Jessamine Road. Crime-scene tape and law enforcemen­t vehicles blocked off both sides of the roadway.

The Sheriff’s Office sent its canines to search the area. Horse trailers pulled up to unload mounted patrols to search on horseback. As the sun set, a search line formed in a vacant, fenced-in pasture. Sheriff’s officials and other searchers walked forward in unison, slowly searching the ground ahead of them.

Law enforcemen­t began a desperate statewide search Tuesday after a relative called MiamiDade police to say they had not been able to get in touch with the infant’s family. Police went to Caballeiro’s home at 21941 SW 187th Ave., and found the three women shot to death with a highpowere­d rifle and the child missing.

Late Wednesday, police identified the dead women as Andrew’s mother, Ariety Garcia-Valdes, 40; grandmothe­r Isabela Valdes, 60; and greatgrand­mother Lina Gonzalez, 84.

The department said it was trying to piece together the “van’s travels” over the past 36 hours and shared photos of the white utility van that had at least two bumper stickers, including one that says FeelTheBer­n.

By Wednesday morning, the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t had issued a statewide Amber Alert for Andrew, with electronic billboards along roadways featuring the vehicle that Caballeiro was believed to be traveling in.

Roads near the Caballeiro home in Redland, just northwest of Homestead, were blocked off as helicopter­s hovered and K9 units searched fields, canals, and around homes. Caballeiro has owned the four-acre property since 2005, according to MiamiDade property records.

Bill Crawford, who has lived on SW 218th St. close to the Caballeiro home since 1980, said he only realized something had been going on when he heard a helicopter. He said he didn’t know much about the family.

“Everybody sticks to themselves down here,” Crawford said.

Public records list Nesty School Services as a company that is owned by Caballeiro and transports students to and from about a dozen South Dade elementary, middle, and high schools. Its Facebook page says it’s licensed and insured. Some of the schools listed on its website include Coral Reef and Robert Morgan Senior High schools and Jack D. Gordon Elementary.

Miami-Dade Public Schools spokeswoma­n Daisy Gonzalez said Nesty is not a contracted vendor with the school system.

She said it’s not unusual for companies to market themselves independen­tly and contract service directly with parents.

State records show that Caballeiro has several arrests in Miami-Dade over the years. In 2004, he was accused of a slew of car thefts and of running a chop shop. Caballeiro wound up pleading guilty and accepting probation on a single charge of grand theft. He was also granted a withhold of adjudicati­on, which meant a criminal conviction did not appear on his record. His probation ended in 2006. He also has previous arrests on charges of aggravated assault and loitering; both cases were dropped.

Nocco, the Pasco County sheriff, said MiamiDade detectives were on their way to Pasco on Wednesday night to help in the search for the child and the investigat­ion into the suicide and murders. He said Caballeiro’s van had about half a tank of diesel fuel left and that investigat­ors were trying to retrace its route. But, said the sheriff, all that was secondary at the moment as the massive search for Andrew continued into the night.

“Our best hope right now,” said Nocco, “is that he handed that baby off to somebody.”

El Nuevo reporter Ana Claudia Chacin and Miami Herald Staff Writer Michelle Marchante contribute­d to this report as did Jamal Thalji, of the Tampa Bay Times.

 ??  ?? Andrew Caballeiro is missing. His father, Ernesto Caballeiro, abducted him and took his own life, police say.
Andrew Caballeiro is missing. His father, Ernesto Caballeiro, abducted him and took his own life, police say.
 ?? DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com ?? Miami-Dade detectives search for evidence on Wednesday at the Redland home of Ernesto Caballeiro.
DAVID GOODHUE dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com Miami-Dade detectives search for evidence on Wednesday at the Redland home of Ernesto Caballeiro.

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