Texto
in Español
Benetech Statistical Analysis Provides Key Evidence
in Conviction of Former Guatemalan Police Officers
Testimony From Daniel Guzmán Helps Establish
Legal Precedent for Prosecution of Forced Disappearances
Contact:
Ann Harrison
415-637-5262
ann.h@benetech.org
December 2, 2010, Palo Alto, CA — Expert testimony by Benetech
statistician Daniel Guzmán provided key evidence in the conviction
of two former police officers who were found guilty in the 1984 forced
disappearance of Guatemalan union leader Edgar Fernando García.
In an extraordinary ruling by the Guatemalan Supreme Court, two former
agents of the Guatemalan National Police, Abraham Lancerio Gómez
and Héctor Roderico Ramírez, were each sentenced to the
maximum term of 40 years in prison for their role in García’s
disappearance.
The verdicts against Gómez and Ramírez have established
forced disappearance as a crime in the Guatemalan judicial system and
prompted government prosecutors to investigate higher ranking officers
for their possible role in the case. The Guatemalan National Police
were disbanded after the country's 1996 Peace Accords which ended 36
years of internal armed conflict. The Recovery of Historical Memory
(REMHI) Project led by the Catholic Church estimates that more than
40,000 Guatemalans disappeared during this time. "I feel proud
to have been able to support justice in Guatemala with my statistical,
technical contribution," said Guzmán. "Most importantly,
García's family is starting to believe some kind of justice is
possible."
Together with members of the Benetech Human
Rights Data Analysis Group, Guzmán has been analyzing a random
sample of the 31.7 million documents contained in the Guatemalan
National Police Archive. Guzmán calculated the percentage
of documents about García known by different police units to
support the prosecution’s argument that Gómez and Ramírez
were involved in García’s disappearance.
This is the first prosecution in the Guatemalan judicial system based
primarily on Archive documents and paves the way for judges to trust
these records as evidence in future human rights cases. "My testimony
helped build a case that the police knew about these disappearances,"
says Guzmán. "If you can show that such documents exist
in the archive, you can keep searching for these kinds of records."
By calculating the percentage of documents known by different police
command structures, Guzmán presented findings about relationships
among security forces and communications between the army and police.
This evidence is critical because historical data has shown that the
Guatemalan army was the force most involved in human rights violations
against civilians. Prosecutors in the García case hypothesized
that the National Police may have carried out crimes against civilians
ordered by the army. Read more about the García
case here.
"I regret very much everything that happened, but justice has
been done," García’s mother María García
told PrensaLibre.com. "Now there will be many others seeking justice
because it is not fair that the disappearance of 45,000 Guatemalans
should go unpunished."
About Benetech
Benetech is a nonprofit technology company based in Palo Alto, California.
Benetech pursues projects with a strong social rather than financial
rate of return on investment, harnessing open source technology to create
innovative solutions to challenging social issues. The Benetech Human
Rights Program designs and builds information management solutions and
conducts statistical analysis on behalf of truth commissions and large
human rights projects around the world. The program includes the Benetech
Human Rights Data Analysis Group and the Martus
project. The Benetech Bookshare
service is the world's largest accessible online library of copyrighted
books for people with print disabilities. Benetech's most recent project,
Miradi, is a user-friendly software
program that helps environmental conservation groups design, manage,
monitor and learn from their projects.
- Back to Top -