Deadly Casino Fire in Mexico Criminal Finally Sentenced After 12 Years
Posted on: September 1, 2023, 03:27h.
Last updated on: September 1, 2023, 02:35h.
Luis Adán “El Gordo” Gómez Vázquez, involved in the arson attack on the Casino Royale in Monterrey, Mexico, on August 25, 2011. has been sentenced in court. The attack resulted in the death of 52 people.
On September 18, 2011, the then-Federal Police arrested Gómez Vázquez in a safe house in Colonia Lázaro Cárdenas, in the municipality of Santa Catarina, Nuevo León. They found weapons and drugs, as well as other alleged accomplices.
Federal authorities identified Gómez, a leader of the infamous Los Zetas cartel, as a key figure in surveillance work around the casino on the day of the attack. While the sentence may bring closure to the victims’ families, other suspects have yet to be arrested.
During the raid on the safe house, the authorities confiscated several items, including a Nissan Sentra with Texas plates, the numbing agent cocaine hydrochloride, and cocaine. They also seized two .45 caliber pistols, two 7.62×39 mm caliber long weapons with 55 cartridges, and other weapons.
Gómez, who also used the name José Pérez and the alias “El Comandante Pelón,” was a former military officer and former agent of the Monterrey Municipal Police. As such, he was able to use his connections to procure weapons that only the military should have been able to access.
Sentencing Details
The sentence imposed is not related to the Casino Royale fire itself. Instead, it’s because of those objects that the authorities found during his capture and the testimonies that link him to organized crime.
“El Gordo” was found guilty of crimes including possession of cocaine hydrochloride, commonly known by the brand name Numbrino in the U.S., with intent to trade, organized crime, and possession of a weapon for the exclusive use of the Army. His sentencing didn’t include any mention of his role in the deaths of the victims.
He’s serving his 32-year sentence at Durango’s Federal Social Readaptation Center. In addition, he received a fine of MXN392,620 (US$22,948).
When police arrested Gómez, they also arrested several of his conspirators, including Jesús Rafael “El Colitas” Torres Bautista. He killed himself in prison a year ago.
Remembering Casino Royale Fire
The sentencing arrives almost precisely on the anniversary of the attack. On August 25, 2011, around 3:15 in the afternoon, the Casino Royale went up in smoke.
Security cameras outside the casino captured when armed men arrived in four vehicles before entering through the venue’s main doors. Statements from witnesses at the time added that they began to spray the gaming machines and the carpet with gasoline.
They then lit the gas on fire, and within minutes, the blaze was burning out of control. Many victims died inside the casino, while a few more died during treatment at a local hospital.
The attack occurred because the owner of the Casino Royale allegedly refused to pay an extortion fee to the cartel. The gang took its revenge on the innocent guests of the property.
Every year since the event, the relatives of the 52 victims have placed offerings in front of the casino to remember their loved ones. They hold a mass annually in which they demand that justice be done.
A year ago, Mexico’s Undersecretary of Human Rights, Alejandro Encinas, gave a formal public apology from the government. However, the friends and families of the victims weren’t impressed then, and they aren’t today. They argue the government still hasn’t done its job in bringing all the perpetrators to justice or is taking too long to prosecute those it has arrested. The long delay in sentencing Gómez supports their arguments.
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