Hefty jail terms for suspects in 2023 murder of Ecuador candidate

Supporters of Fernando Villavicencio shout slogans as they await sentencing for five suspects in the murderer of the former Ecuadoran presidential candidate on July 12, 2024 (Rodrigo BUENDIA)
Supporters of Fernando Villavicencio shout slogans as they await sentencing for five suspects in the murderer of the former Ecuadoran presidential candidate on July 12, 2024 (Rodrigo BUENDIA)

Five suspects in the assassination of Ecuadoran presidential candidate Fernando Villavicencio, shot dead last year just before the country's election, were handed hefty prison sentences Friday for their roles in the killing.

Main suspect and alleged gang member Carlos Angulo, 31, "is sentenced to 34 years and eight months in prison" for having planned and ordered from prison the murder of Villavicencio, according to the sentence read out in court.

Another defendant, Laura Castillo, received the same sentence for providing weapons, money, vehicles and motorcycles to the Colombian hitmen who fatally shot Villavicencio on August 9, 2023 as he was leaving a rally in Quito.

Villavicencio, a former investigative journalist who vowed to combat political corruption and drug trafficking, was killed days before the first round of voting in the presidential election.

Six Colombian men were arrested hours after the shooting, but all of them were killed while in prison two months later.

Seven additional suspects were later arrested, one of whom died and another who was acquitted.

The remaining five went on trial.

In addition to Angulo and Castillo, accomplices Erick Ramirez, Victor Flores and Alexandra Chimbo were handed 12-year prison terms.

According to prosecutors, Flores handled security for the motorcycle on which the hitman who shot Villavicencio was traveling, while Chimbo was in charge of alerting the gunmen about the candidate's departure. Ramirez did logistics work.

Some of the suspects were accused of ties to "Los Lobos," one of the main gangs in Ecuador fighting for control of the drug trade that has led to a spike in violence in recent years within the small South American country.

A witness who testified during the trial claimed there was a $200,000 bounty on Villavicencio's head due to his campaign against gangs and corruption.

The witness also accused the suspects of working for individuals tied to the administration of former Ecuador president Rafael Correa, who is in exile after he was convicted on corruption charges in 2020.

The former president, who lives in Belgium, denies any link to the assassination.

"We need to know the whole truth and make sure this is not repeated again," Amanda Villavicencio, daughter of the assassinated candidate, wrote on the social media platform X.

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