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Robledo Puch

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Name
  
Robledo Puch

Victims
  
11

Role
  
Serial Killer

Span of killings
  
1971–1972

Date apprehended
  
February 1972

Country
  

Robledo Puch RobledoPuchdetenidoasesinadopersonasCLAIMA20150327016236jpg

Born
  
January 19, 1952 (age 72) (
1952-01-19
)
Buenos Aires, Argentina

Other names
  
The Death AngelThe Black Angel

Similar People
  
Cayetano Santos Godino, Ricardo Barreda, Yiya Murano, Oriel Briant

Criminal penalty
  
Life imprisonment

C5n chiche en vivo robledo puch historia de un asesino


Carlos Eduardo Robledo Puch (born January 19, 1952), also known as "The Death Angel" and "The Black Angel", is an Argentine serial killer. He was convicted of 11 murders, one attempted murder, 17 robberies, one rape, one attempted rape, one count of sexual abuse, two kidnappings and two thefts. He killed his victims in a variety of ways, such as stabbing, shooting, strangling, bludgeoning to death with rocks and slitting their throats. He has been in prison since 1973.

Contents

Los goldsilver la balada de robledo puch


Early life

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In 1956, when Carlos was 4 years old, his parents moved the family Borges, Olivos, Buenos Aires, where they rented a first floor apartment above a hardware store. Carlos came from a working class family and was a shy child.

Criminal Activity

Robledo Puch carlos puch Tumblr

On 15 March 1971, Robledo Puch and his accomplice, Jorge Antonio Ibañez, robbed the discotheque Enamor, stealing 350.000 pesos. Before fleeing, Carlos, using a Ruby pistol, killed the owner of the discotheque and the night watchman while they slept.

Robledo Puch Robledo Puch Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

On 9 May 1971 at 4 am, Robledo Puch and Ibañez broke into a Mercedes Benz spare parts store in Vicente López. In one of the rooms, they found a couple with their newborn baby. Robledo Puch shot and killed the man and shot the woman, who only sustained gunshot injuries. Ibañez attempted to, and failed to, rape the injured woman. The woman survived the ordeal and later testified at the trial. Before fleeing with 400.000 pesos, Carlos shot the crib where the newborn lay crying, but he missed.

On 24 May 1971, both criminals killed a night watchmen in a supermarket.

On 13 June 1971, Ibañez raped a 16 year-old girl in the backseat of a stolen car, after which Robledo Puch killed the teenager by shooting her 5 times. On 24 June 1971, they drove to the same location and repeated the crime - Ibañez attempted to rape a 23 year-old woman, whom Carlos executed afterwards by shooting her seven times.

On 5 August 1971, Ibañez died in a car accident. Robledo Puch was driving and fled from the scene unscathed.

On 15 November 1971, Robledo Puch and his new accomplice, Héctor Somoza, stormed a supermarket in Bolougne and, using a .32 caliber Astra pistol that they had obtained just a few days prior in the robbery of an armory, riddled the scene with bullets.

Between 17 November 1971 and 24 November 1971, they broke into two car dealerships and murdered the watchmen, stealing over 1.000.000 pesos.

Arrest

On 1 February 1972, Robledo Puch and Somoza broke into a hardware store. They killed the watchman and tried to open the safe with the keys they obtained from his body. They were unable to do so and, allegedly in a state of confusion during which Robledo Puch apparently was startled by something, he shot Somoza and killed him. In order to impede or prevent identification of the body by police investigators, he took a blowtorch and burned the face of his deceased accomplice. After opening the safe with the same blowtorch, he took the money he found there and fled the scene. He was arrested on 4 February 1972, after his identity card was found in Somoza's pants pocket. He had just turned 20.

Trial, reclusion and present day

He was tried in 1980 and sentenced to life imprisonment, the maximum sentence in Argentina, to be served in the high-security prison of Sierra Chica, near the city of Olavarria. The last words he spoke before the court were "This was a Roman circus. I was judged and sentenced beforehand."

Part of the contents of the file of a psychiatrist who examined him, presented at trial, read:

"Roble Puch comes from a legitimate and complete home, absent from unfavorable hygienic and moral circumstances."

"There were also no economic constraints of importance, reverses of fortune, abandonment of the home, lack of work, personal misfortune, illness, affective conflicts, overcrowding or promiscuity."

In July of 2000, he became eligible for parole; however, he didn't submit a petition.

On 27 May 2008, Puch submitted a petition of request to be paroled. The judge who reviewd his petition denied him parole, considering him to still be a threat to society.

In November of 2013, he requested a review of his sentence or, failing that, his execution by a lethal injection, even though the death penalty was not legal in Argentina. The Supreme Court of Justice denied both the request for review and the request for execution, the latter of which would have been illegal.

On 27 March 2015, the Supreme Court of Justice rejected an appeal filed by Carlos Eduardo Robledo Puch against the aforementioned judicial decision whereby he was denied parole.

As of July 2017, he spent more than 45 years in prison, making him the longest serving prisoner in Argentina.

References

Robledo Puch Wikipedia