An Argentine former navy officer has been convicted of crimes against humanity after a photo smuggled by a detainee helped to prove his involvement in the atrocities.

Ex-navy lieutenant and Navy Intelligence Service member Jorge Luis Guarrochena was sentenced to life imprisonment for abuses committed against over 400 victims during the last civic-military dictatorship at the Higher Navy School of Mechanics (ESMA by its Spanish initials), the regime’s largest clandestine detention center. The verdict was announced during a trial session on Wednesday.

Víctor Basterra, a victim illegally detained in the ESMA between 1979 and 1983, was key to identifying Guarrochena. During his detention, he was forced to take pictures of dozens of officers, which were used to create fake documents. One of the pictures he took was of Guarrochena, posing as a federal police officer.

In the final months of his imprisonment, Basterra was allowed to briefly leave the ESMA, and managed to sneak out the photo negatives. His pictures and testimonies, along with expert analysis, made it possible to prove that Guarrochena worked in the intelligence sector from 1982 to mid 1983, according to Argentine human rights organization CELS. Basterra died in 2020.

The Buenos Aires Federal Oral Court n°5 convicted Guarrochena of being the co-perpetrator of hundreds of crimes against humanity, including over 300 kidnappings, the murder of over 100 victims, 300 cases of torture against political detainees, and the kidnapping and hiding of 44 children of the detainees. He was also convicted of rape and sexual assault.

While other officers had already been convicted for most of these crimes, Guarrochena was convicted of 25 offenses that had gone unpunished until now.

This is the first time a person has been convicted of kidnapping children who were with their parents when they were detained. These children were kept hidden at ESMA or other locations.

“Some of those children remained kidnapped for days, months or even years, some alongside their parents, who were forced to do slave work,” federal prosecutor Félix Crous, who was in charge of the investigation, told the Herald.

These children, unlike those who were appropriated by the military, were later returned to their families.

Guarrochena’s conviction ended the seventh trial of the ESMA mega-investigation, which has been going on for the past two decades. The verdict was announced at a courtroom in the presence of the plaintiffs, the accusing party and general public, but Guarrochena and the judges participated via video call.

“This sentence is key to prove the crucial role the navy intelligence had in the ESMA repressive circuit because of its cooperation to carry out the extermination plan designed by the navy,” wrote the Center for Legal and Social Studies (CELS by its Spanish acronym) on X. CELS was one of the plaintiffs, representing some of the victims’ families.

Guarrochena has been in pre-trial detention since 2018 at the 34th unit of the Campo de Mayo penal institute, where many other repressors are detained. This is the first time he has been tried for his crimes.

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Argentine ex-navy officer convicted of torturing 300 people thanks to smuggled photo

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25.04.2024

An Argentine former navy officer has been convicted of crimes against humanity after a photo smuggled by a detainee helped to prove his involvement in the atrocities.

Ex-navy lieutenant and Navy Intelligence Service member Jorge Luis Guarrochena was sentenced to life imprisonment for abuses committed against over 400 victims during the last civic-military dictatorship at the Higher Navy School of Mechanics (ESMA by its Spanish initials), the regime’s largest clandestine detention center. The verdict was announced during a trial session on Wednesday.

Víctor Basterra, a victim illegally detained in the ESMA between 1979 and 1983, was key to identifying Guarrochena. During his detention, he was forced to take pictures of dozens of officers, which were used to create fake documents.........

© Buenos Aires Herald


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