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Lydia
ECHEVARRÍA
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Parricide - Jealousy - Murder for hire
Number of victims: 1
Date of murder: January 17, 1983
Date of arrest:
April 14, 1985
Date of birth: October 14, 1931
Victim profile:
Luis Vigoreaux, 53 (her
husband)
Method of murder:
Spreading
gasoline over Vigoreaux's car and set it on fire, burning
Vigoreaux to death
Location: Puerto Rico, USA
Status:
Sentenced to 208 years in prison in 1986. Paroled in 1999
Lydia Echevarría
(born October 14, 1931) is a controversial Puerto Rican actress. She
was convicted of masterminding the murder of her husband Luis
Vigoreaux and spent 13 years in jail.
Echevarría married Luis Vigoreaux, producer of such
1960s and 70s WAPA-TV television shows as Pa'rriba Papi Pa'rriba and
Sube Nene Sube, on February 10, 1960. She co-hosted the shows with him
and together, they became one of Puerto Rico's most famous couples.
Vigoreaux and Echevarría had two daughters, Vanessa Vigoreaux and
Glendaly Vigoreaux.
In 1982, Luis Vigoreaux allegedly began an affair
with model Nydia Castillo, and in 1983, he was found burnt to death
inside his car. Almost immediately, a large part of the public started
pointing fingers at different people, and in 1984, Echevarría was
formally accused of her husband's death.
Her trial was one of the most sensational in Puerto
Rican history, with a media circus atmosphere because of the celebrity
status of the couple.
In 1986, she was found guilty and sentenced to 208
years in a women's prison in Vega Alta, P.R. However, her health
deteriorated and in 1999, Governor Pedro Rosselló allowed her to leave
jail to live at home under a curfew. Since then she has appeared in
plays and some TV shows, on the condition that she be home by 8 p.m.
every night.
Lydia Echevarría (born October 14, 1931) is
a Puerto Rican actress who was convicted of plotting the murder of her
husband, renowned Puerto Rican television show producer, Luis
Vigoreaux.
Early years
Echevarría, met producer Luis Vigoreaux in 1960,
during the presentation of a show called "La Hora Cero" (Zero Hour)
which Vigoreaux produced with actor Mario Pabón. On February 10, 1960,
after they were married, Echevarría joined her husband as co-host in
the 1960s and 70s in the television shows Pa'rriba Papi Pa'rriba
and Sube Nene Sube transmitted through WAPA-TV and together,
they became one of Puerto Rico's most famous couples. Vigoreaux and
Echevarría had two daughters, Vanessa Vigoreaux and Glendaly
Vigoreaux.
Films
Among the films and Novelas (soap operas) in which
Echevarría has participated are the following:
Doña Ana (short) - as Dona Ana (2003)
Life During Wartime - as Evangelina (2009)
(Post-production)
Novelas
Vivir para tí (TV series) - as Clara (1982)
Yo sé que mentía (TV series) - (1982
Conviction
In 1982, Luis Vigoreaux allegedly began an affair
with model Nydia Castillo, and in 1983, he was found burnt to death
inside his car. Almost immediately, a large part of the public started
pointing fingers at different people, and in 1984, Echevarría was
formally accused of her husband's death. Her trial was one of the most
sensational in Puerto Rican history, with a media circus atmosphere
because of the celebrity status of the couple.
In 1986, she was found guilty and sentenced to 208
years in a women's prison in Vega Alta, Puerto Rico. However, her
health deteriorated and in 1999, Governor Pedro Rosselló allowed her
to leave jail to live at home under a curfew.
In 2001, she resumed her acting career with the
presentation of a play titled "Confinadas" (meaning women prisoner) in
the same prison where she served her time. Since then she has appeared
in plays and some TV shows, on the condition that she be home by 8
p.m. every night.
Glendaly Vigoreaux, the couple's eldest daughter,
committed suicide in her Arizona residence on July 15, 2008.
Wikipedia.org
Echevarría case exposes justice double standards
By Robert Becker - Puerto Rico Herald
March 9, 2001
In a recent matinee performance at the Guaynabo
Performing Arts Center, the crowd of middle class theater goers stood
and cheered for actress Lydia Echevarria, the star of “The Convicts,”
a play about life in prison.
It was an ironic moment in Guaynabo, the San Juan
suburb whose residents boast the highest per capita income in Puerto
Rico. The fans had sallied forth from their posh homes in Guaynabo’s
gated communities to cheer on a convicted murderer.
The Echevarria case, full of soap-operatic twists
and turns, shows there are two standards of justice in Puerto Rico:
one for the rich, famous and well-connected; and another for everyone
else.
Echevarria’s return to the stage, little more than
a year after receiving a commutation of her sentence for the first
degree murder of her husband, has triggered screaming newspaper
headlines, intense TV news coverage and an avalanche of phone calls to
talk radio programs. Adding to the bizarre atmospherics, Echevarria in
the production plays Maggie, a woman sentenced to 99 years in prison
for killing her husband.
It was a reprise of a role Echevarria played on
stage 20 years ago, just before the horrific events that led to her
imprisonment.
Echevarria, now 70, was in her heyday one of Puerto
Rico’s best-known actresses on stage and television. She was married
to TV personality and producer Luis Vigoreaux.
On Jan. 17, 1983, Vigoreaux was kidnapped by two
thugs, driven to a remote area outside of San Juan, and then
repeatedly stabbed with an ice pick and bludgeoned with a tire iron.
While Vigoreaux was still alive, drug addict David Lopez Watts and
male model Francisco “ Papo” Newmann stuffed him into the trunk of the
Mercedes, doused the car with gasoline and set it ablaze. The autopsy
report showed Vigoreaux was roasted alive.
The police tracked down the kidnappers, who said
Echevarria paid them the princely sum of $2,500 for the murder. It
came to light that Vigoreaux had a fashion-model mistress, and was
planning to divorce his wife and marry the younger woman. He was
murdered the day his divorce decree was supposed to be finalized.
After a sensational trial, Echevarria was convicted
in July, 1986, for first degree murder and kidnapping. She received a
208-year sentence, which she began serving at the Vega Alta Women’s
women’s jail. Ultimately, she served 13 1/2 years.
Echevarria numbered among her friends wealthy and
influential people in business and the arts. They campaigned
continuously for her release. On March 7, 1996, during the observation
of Women’ s Week, the Puerto Rico Senate voted 21-0 urging her
release. Finally, Gov. Pedro Rossello on Jan. 27, 2000 commuted her
sentence.
Rossello’s commutation was almost as controversial
as Echevarria’s return to the stage. While he had once said that he
would not extend clemency to anyone convicted of a violent crime or
drug trafficking, his commutation violated that pledge. Moreover,
despite a mountain of evidence, Echevarria has steadfastly refused to
admit her part in the murder, and has never expressed remorse.
Rossello told me, in a December, 2000 interview in
his office, that he released Echevarria for ‘ humanitarian reasons” --
her declining health. He said the commutation was an exception to his
long-held policy, and that Echevarria presented no danger to the
community.
Echevarria’s actions since her release have made a
mockery of the commutation. The convict in declining health told
reporters after her March 4 matinee performance that her knees
bothered her but that otherwise she felt “fine.”
Echevarria had applied to the Puerto Rico Parole
Board to extend her curfew from 8 p.m. until 1 a.m. so she could do
evening performances, but she was turned down.
A sizable bloc of public opinion is favorable to
Echevarria. In a telephone survey conducted by the San Juan Star
around the time of her performance, 46 percent of the respondents said
they disagreed with the Parole Board’s denial of her request to extend
her curfew.
One of Vigoreaux’s children, Roberto Vigoreaux, is
a member of the Puerto Rico legislature. Distressed by his mother’s
conduct, he has prompted legislative hearings to demand the release of
her medical records.
Celeste Benitez, a former Popular Democratic Party
senator, said Echevarria’s release from jail was unsupportable, as
evidenced by her complete lack of rehabilitation.
Echevarria indeed remains unrepentant, even
defiant, about the murder and her public notoriety, When a Channel
11-TV reporter asked her in a recent on-camera interview about the
murder, she stormed off the set.
On stage, while making her curtain call to her
cheering fans in Guaynabo, the murderess did a few dance steps before
heading for the wings.
Another tragedy for Vigoreaux family
El Vocero de Puerto Rico
July 18, 2008
Police in Glendale County, Arizona confirmed
yesterday that 44-year-old Glendaly Vigoreaux Echevarría, daughter of
the late [Puerto Rican] TV producer Luis Vigoreaux and actress Lydia
Echevarría, was found dead by her husband Paul Hacker in their home on
Frier Drive in Glendale, Arizona.
According to Glendale Police report PD 08-77459
signed by Sergeant Jim Toomey, agency detectives are investigating
Glendaly Vigoreaux's death as a suicide, as confirmed by the autopsy
performed by the Maricopa County Medical Examiner's Office.
The report indicated that officers responded to a
call on Tuesday, July 15 at 9:58 AM from the residence of Glendaly
Vigoreaux and Paul Hacker on Frier Drive.
Vigoreaux and Hacker were married, although the
former kept her maiden name.
According to the report, Hacker told police
officers that he left his house around 7:30 AM and returned shortly
thereafter, finding Vigoreaux lifeless on the floor. The body had a
bullet wound to the head. A semiautomatic caliber .380 revolver was
found at the scene. Forensic and physical evidence is consistent with
a self-inflicted shooting.
Officials with the Maricopa County Medical
Examiner's Office performed an autopsy and concluded that the manner
of death points to suicide.
The reason for Vigoreaux to take her life is
unknown.
For his part, Vigoreaux's uncle and Lydia
Echevarría's brother Rafael Miranda Rodríguez said yesterday that "at
4:00 PM, I spoke to Lydia from the airport in Houston - which means
she has not arrived - and told me that [Glendaly's sister] Vanessa –
who is in Glendale, in front of the house – told her that it was full
of paparazzi, worse that here."
Miranda revealed that "it was finally confirmed to
Lydia, after Glendaly's autopsy, that it was a suicide. Glenda's
husband Paul had not told her due to all her health conditions such as
diabetes, heart conditions, and thyroid. Seeing her so desperate about
the illnesses, he made the decision not to say [anything] about the
suicide. That is the scenario Lydia faced. And Vanessa is over there.
Paul practices target shooting and had new-automobile dealerships."
Miranda indicated that "Paul is traumatized because
he had never lived that experience among celebrities, and said that
seeing all those photographers was a horrible thing. For now, the body
will be brought home for a wake."
Francisco 'Papo' Newman is a Puerto Rican
who was convicted of murder, after allegedly participating in the
murder of the Puerto Rican television entertainer Luis Vigoreaux on
January 17, 1983.
Newman was arrested, confessed to the crime, and
testified against his accomplices in exchange for a reduced sentence.
He identified David López Watts as his accomplice and Vigoreaux's wife
Lydia Echevarría as the mastermind (in 1986, she was found guilty and
sent to prison for 254 years). Newman stated that he was addicted to
drugs and that he had taken drugs before committing the crime.
Newman confessed that it was he who entered
Vigoreaux's car and ordered Vigoreaux to drive to the place where the
murder was committed. He also confessed that after López Watts stabbed
Vigoreaux, he hit the victim on the head with a car wrench.
Ultimately, Newman confessed that it was he who spread gasoline over
Vigoreaux's car and set it on fire, burning Vigoreaux to death as he
was still alive and locked in the trunk of the car.
Newman was charged with first degree murder,
aggravated kidnapping, conspiracy, and aggravated damages. He has
expressed regret about his actions, attributing his behaviour at the
time to his drug addiction.