Eduardo Epaminondas González Dubón
Epaminondas González Dubón was a president of the Constitutional Court of Guatemala who was assassinated in 1994.[1]
Murder
González received death threats just a week before being shot and killed in his car in front of his family.[2]
The assassination may have been political in nature. As a member of the court, González had ruled that President Jorge Serrano's self-imposed coup was unconstitutional just a year earlier. He had voted to allow the United States to extradite Lieutenant Colonel Carlos Ochoa Ruiz just a month before his murder.[3] After the murder, the remaining Constitutional Court judges voted against the decision.[4]
Marlon Salazar López and Antonio Trabanino Vargas have both been convicted in the murder of González. A third alleged murderer, Mario Salazar López, was convicted, successfully appealed the case and was arrested again in 2001.[5]
References
- ↑ "Judge Epaminondas González Dubón, President of the Constitutional Court, killed in Guatemala City in 1994," HumanRightsFirst.org. (accessed January 22, 2010)
- ↑ "Judge Epaminondas González Dubón, President of the Constitutional Court, killed in Guatemala City in 1994," HumanRightsFirst.org. (accessed January 22, 2010)
- ↑ "Judge Epaminondas González Dubón, President of the Constitutional Court, killed in Guatemala City in 1994," HumanRightsFirst.org. (accessed January 22, 2010)
- ↑ "Judge Epaminondas González Dubón, President of the Constitutional Court, killed in Guatemala City in 1994," HumanRightsFirst.org. (accessed January 22, 2010)
- ↑ "Judge Epaminondas González Dubón, President of the Constitutional Court, killed in Guatemala City in 1994," HumanRightsFirst.org. (accessed January 22, 2010)