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Kiriakou writes: "Millions of Americans travel overseas every year, whether it's across the border to the Canadian side of Niagara Falls, Cancun, or to more exotic locales. But nobody expects to die violently while abroad, and especially not a 16-year-old. That's what happened to Alex Villamayor."

Alex Villamayor, right, the 16-year-old son of a former Paraguayan congressman from Montgomery County, Luis Villamayor, was found dead on June 27th on the terrace of a farm in Paraguay where he was staying with friends over the weekend. (photo: Instagram)
Alex Villamayor, right, the 16-year-old son of a former Paraguayan congressman from Montgomery County, Luis Villamayor, was found dead on June 27th on the terrace of a farm in Paraguay where he was staying with friends over the weekend. (photo: Instagram)


Murder in Paraguay

By John Kiriakou, Reader Supported News

03 November 17

 

illions of Americans travel overseas every year, whether it’s across the border to the Canadian side of Niagara Falls, Cancun, or to more exotic locales. But nobody expects to die violently while abroad, and especially not a 16-year-old.

That’s what happened to Alex Villamayor.

Villamayor was an American citizen living with his parents in Paraguay. As the summer wound down, he made plans to begin his freshman year of college in Maryland. But first, he accepted an invitation to spend a weekend at the family ranch of a teenage friend in Paraguay.

That weekend ended with Villamayor dead of a gunshot wound to the head.

Paraguayan authorities were quick to rule the death a suicide. But this didn’t make any sense. There was no gun residue on Villamayor’s hand, and the gun was placed in such a way that it would have been nearly impossible for him to have fired the shot.

Moreover, Alex was a happy kid — an honors student — with a supportive family. As far as the people closest to him could tell, he was going places in life and seemed excited about the future.

The Villamayor family did what every family is supposed to do in a terrible situation like this: They immediately contacted the American embassy and the FBI for assistance. They asked embassy officers there to press for a proper investigation. But the Paraguayan authorities had already botched the case.

Under intense pressure from the Villamayors, the case was reinvestigated and the cause of death was changed to homicide. But the area where Alex died wasn’t sealed off. Witnesses weren’t interviewed. And the classmate who’d invited Alex to the ranch fled the country and is now incarcerated.

Meanwhile, the US embassy said it would “monitor the situation.” I’ve worked in American embassies around the world, so let me tell you what that means: it means that they don’t intend to do anything.

Indeed, all the embassy did was send a diplomatic note to the Paraguayan government asking for “clarification” of the investigation.

The family then contacted their elected officials. And this is where Donald Trump ought to come in. He’s made a mantra of putting “America First.” Now is the time to do exactly that, even if the Villamayors’ other elected representatives won’t.

After Alex’s aunt, Kim Luk, contacted her senators for their help, Maryland senator Ben Cardin and former senator Barbara Mikulski wrote back saying that the embassy was “working with the family” on the case, apparently not even realizing that it was the family who had contacted them in the first place.

Cardin’s staff had the gall to send a follow-up letter saying that they’d “spearheaded a call to the embassy.” Mikulski’s office didn’t even pretend to be interested in the case. She was retiring.

To his credit, then-representative Chris Van Hollen, who replaced Mikulski in the Senate in January 2017, has taken up the case and has pressed the State Department for action. But that begs the question: Where’s the State Department in all this?

The State Department’s Office of Overseas Citizen Services should be all over Paraguayan authorities to fully and properly investigate this case. It isn’t. It’s “monitoring the situation” too.

What’s going on? Citizens of the strongest country in the world should be able to count on help from Washington if they run into trouble overseas. Instead, they’re taking their lives into their own hands.

And in the meantime, what is the FBI doing? Remember, since the 1980s, it has been a crime in the US to commit a crime against an American overseas. So, because justice isn’t being done in Paraguay, Alex’s killers could and should be prosecuted in the US.

Paraguayan authorities, though, have banned the FBI from the investigation and from even entering Paraguay to get a lay of the land. Letters that the Villamayor family has written to the State Department, to the Paraguayan Ambassador to the US, to Senator Cardin, and to the embassy have either been ignored or brushed off.

Two of Alex’s accused killers will finally go on trial next week, more than two years after murdering their friend. Their co-conspirators still walk free. The accused have plenty of money to buy off witnesses, lawyers, judges, and pretty much anybody else. That’s how things often work when you’re rich and everybody else in the country is poor.

If there was ever a time for Donald Trump to “put America first,” this is it.



John Kiriakou is a former CIA counterterrorism officer and a former senior investigator with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. John became the sixth whistleblower indicted by the Obama administration under the Espionage Act – a law designed to punish spies. He served 23 months in prison as a result of his attempts to oppose the Bush administration's torture program.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.


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