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Malevo Ferreyra

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Pen name
  
Malevo

Nationality
  
Argentine

Occupation
  
Police officer

Malevo Ferreyra El hijo del Malevo Ferreyra sali a robar y mat un polica El Liberal

Born
  
June 17, 1945Cruz Alta Department, Tucumán, Argentina (
1945-06-17
)

Died
  
21 November 2008, Cruz Alta Department, Argentina

Similar
  
Almir Kayumov, Daniele Alves Lopes, Ricardo López (stalker)

Archivo difilm malevo ferreyra con menos condena 06 12 1996


Mario Oscar Ferreyra, better known as Malevo (June 17, 1945 – November 21, 2008) was an Argentine police chief. Being a police officer during the Proceso de Reorganización Nacional, he participated in the Dirty War, fighting against left-wing guerrilla groups. After the return of democracy, he would become the chief of Tucumán Provincial Police, being involved in many shootings and the dubious deaths of plenty of supposed criminals. He would later be prosecuted and discharged from the force. He shot himself in 2008, when facing his imminent arrest, and his suicide was broadcast live on national TV.

Contents

Malevo Ferreyra El Malevo Ferreyra se mat frente a las cmaras de TV antes de ser

Difilm el malevo ferreyra se atrinchera en la alcaldia de los tribunales 1993


Early life

Malevo Ferreyra Al quotMalevoquot lo buscaban por delitos de lesa humanidad MDZ Online

Mario Oscar Ferreyra was born pn June 17, 1945, in Los Pereyra, Cruz Alta, a locality to the east of San Miguel de Tucumán. When he was 18 years old, he enlisted in the police. He had been deemed physically unfit because of his small stature and low weight, but managed to enter the force thanks to a relative. In 1973, he fought against 15 demonstrators of the Juventud Peronista during a brawl in downtown, where he was hit with a glass bottle, leaving him a scar that would last for the rest of his life. Two years after this, he killed Julio Alsogaray, a militant of Montoneros guerrilla faction, in a one-on-one confrontation. He shot him with a FN FAL rifle. During the Military Junta rule, he was suspended for two years and five months, after being accused by his superiors of the senseless use of lethal force. In 1986, after the return of democracy, he was prosecuted for the killing of the well known criminal Enrique "Prode" Correa, but justice acquitted him for lack of evidence. One year later, when he was the chief of Robos y Hurtos(Robbery Division of the Police), he was involved in a shooting in the northern access of the city of San Miguel de Tucumán, in which two members of a prominent crime family were killed. In 1988, he was accused of the killing of another member of that same crime family, Daniel Carrizo, who had also been tortured in a cell of the Robbery Division's headquarters before his death. He was again acquitted. In january 1990, he was named chief of the General Investigations Division, and two months later leaded a police strike against governor José Domato, which forced the Gendarmería Nacional Argentina to take the law enforcing duties in the province until the dispute was resolved in his favor. This gave him the respect and affection of his co-workers.

Laguna de Robles

Malevo Ferreyra El quotMalevoquot Ferreyra se suicid ayer en Tucumn 22112008 LA NACION

On October 10 of 1991, in Laguna de Robles, a rural locality in the northern area of Tucumán, three presumed criminals were found murdered. Their names were José "Coco" Menéndez, Hugo "Yegua Verde" Vera and Ricardo "El Pelao" Andrada. Ferreyra argued that the victims had been killed in an armed clash and formed part of a dangerous gang of robbers. On November of that same year, he accused some other high ranking officers of malversation of public funds. These same police officers would, the day after the accusations, discharge him from the force. He was later accused of executing the three victims of the Laguna de Robles murders, and on December 9 he handed himself over to justice. The trial started on November 26, 1993. He was found guilty on December 14, but escaped the Courthouse by threatening to blow himself and the other people present in the room with a grenade he had brought hidden somewhere. 79 days later he was surrounded by federal forces in Zorro Muerto, in the neighboring province of Santiago del Estero. He was sent to Villa Urquiza prison, where he was supposed to spend 20 years. but was set free much sooner. The governor of Tucumán at the time, Antonio Domingo Bussi, was a former military who had taken part in the Process of National Reorganization and was fond of the Malevo, so he reduced his sentence in 1996.

Later life and death

Malevo Ferreyra Un hroe silencioso llamado Osmar Ferreyra Taringa

He would spend the rest of his life living in his property in San Andrés, a few kilometers away from his place of birth. In 2008, during the trials for crimes against humanity that took place during the Kirchnerism's government, he was again prosecuted for crimes he had supposedly committed during the Dirty War. On November 21, Gendarmería Nacional was sent to his house to arrest him. He climbed up a water tower and was followed by a TV camera crew from national news broadcaster Crónica TV. As he saw he had been surrounded by about 20 policemen, and with no intention of going back to prison, he took a gun and shot himself in the head. He had stated earlier that day that he would take any measure in order not to go to jail again. When asked if he was capable of killing himself, he said he'd do "Just like Hannibal". TV cameras captured this moment from a very close distance, as he was being interviewed and took this decision totally unexpectedly. His death was broadcast to the whole nation. He left wife and children

Malevo Ferreyra edantclarincomdiario20081121umthumbmalevojpg

Malevo Ferreyra Se suicid el quotMalevoquot Ferreyra 21112008 LA NACION

References

Malevo Ferreyra Wikipedia