Harman Patil (Editor)

1998 Guatemala student rapes

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Attack type
  
Assault, rape, robbery

Location
  
Santa Lucía Cotzumalguapa, Guatemala

Date
  
Friday, January 16, 1998 3:30-5:00 pm (UTC-6)

Victims
  
13 students, 5 of whom were raped; 2 professors, 1 administrator, 1 bus driver

On January 16, 1998 five American students were raped while on a school sponsored trip to Guatemala. The case led to attention from the highest levels of the American and Guatemalan governments, including then-US president Bill Clinton, and led to concerns about whether the safety of students was adequately protected while traveling abroad. The students were studying at St. Mary's College of Maryland.

Contents

Background

The college at the time conducted annual tours for students to Guatemala. The 17-day tours were conducted during the winter recess and were offered for college credit. The school was conducting its third such tour and noted that there had been no problems on either of the previous tours. However, violence against women had been rising in the area. In July 1997, a public bus was hijacked with everyone being robbed and five women, including two American citizens, being raped. Four other American women were raped in Guatemala in other incidents in July and August 1997.

Details

A group of 13 students—12 women and 1 man—along with 2 faculty members and 1 administrator from St. Mary's College were returning to Guatemala City after an excursion on an educational tour of Guatemala. At about 3:30pm on January 16, 1998, their bus was forced off the road by at least four gunmen. Gunshots were fired to force the driver to pull into a ditch alongside the road. The bus was forced into a nearby sugar cane field where it wasn't visible from the road. All of the group were robbed, but the gunmen were disappointed that they weren't carrying more cash. Five women were then selected to be raped. One was raped on the bus in front of classmates and the other four were raped in the field. The passengers on the bus were required to lie face down as each of the five women, one at a time, were raped multiple times. The women who were raped were aged 19 and 20. The rape victims returned to the United States on January 17, 1998 with the rest of the group following the next day.

Criminal trial

Two of the rape victims returned to Guatemala in January 1999 to testify against their attackers. The men accused were Cosby Urias, a 37-year-old laborer; Rony Polanco, a 25-year-old driver; and Reyes Guch Ventura, a 25-year-old peddler. All three men were convicted and sentenced to 28 years in prison: 18 years for rape and 10 years for robbery.

Civil lawsuit

Three of the students sued the college, alleging that the college failed to take reasonable steps to protect them. Included as additional defendants were the board of trustees, the college president Jane Margaret O'Brien, and the two professors and administrator who accompanied the group. One victim sued for $5 million; another for $500,000; and third for $250,000. The lawsuit was eventually settled with one student receiving $100,000 (the maximum amount allowed by law); another $65,000; and the third $30,000. O'Brien claimed that the college was not responsible but was willing to settle the lawsuit to avoid the pain to all of going to trial.

References

1998 Guatemala student rapes Wikipedia