Andrés Ulises Castillo Villarreal

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Andrés Castillo
Born
Andrés Ulises Castillo Villarreal

1980 (age 41–42)
Other names"The Chihuahua Ripper"
"The Urban Development Ripper"
Conviction(s)Murder
Criminal penalty120 years imprisonment
Details
Victims3–12+
Span of crimes
2009–2015
CountryMexico
State(s)Chihuahua
Date apprehended
January 6, 2016

Andrés Ulises Castillo Villarreal (born 1980) is a Mexican serial killer active in his hometown of Chihuahua City, raping and murdering at least three men and raping a teenager between 2009 and 2015.[1] He confessed to around 12 murders, earning the nicknames "The Chihuahua Ripper" and "The Urban Development Ripper".[2][3] He can be classified as an organized, sedentary and hedonistic murderer motivated by sexual compulsion. He was sentenced to 120 years imprisonment in 2017.[4]

Modus operandi[]

Castillo, who was a narcomenudista, attracted his victims (young men who used methamphetamines) with the promise of giving them drugs, driving them to secluded places on the outskirts of town or their own home,[5] where he would drug and intoxicate them. Afterwards, he would hit them on the head with a blunt object to first incapacitate and rape them, before hitting them on the head to kill them.[6] The bodies would then always be dismembered with a coping saw.[7] Castillo would then transport the remains in a wheelbarrow to abandon them in vacant places, where he would either hide them partially or bury them completely.[6][7] It is known that at least one of his victims had been buried under the floor of his house.[8] Additionally, he would always leave toys next to the mutilated bodies as a "signature".[9]

Confirmed victims[]

Murder of Lorenzo Ernesto Olivas Barrios[]

Castillo's first identified victim was Lorenzo Ernesto Olivas Barrios, a 22-year-old man from Delicias, who had moved months before his death to the city of Chihuahua to work in a food company.[1][10][11] He lived with relatives in Colonia Vista Hermosa before disappearing on November 13, 2015, saying to a relative that he was going to buy "some dinner", but never returned.[12] Three days later, on November 16, his relatives reported his disappearance; they would not hear any news about him until the following day, when the dismembered remains of a man were found by some neighbors of the Urban Development Company.[10][11][12]

The arms and legs were found inside an abandoned house on Novena and San Abel Streets. Two days later the torso and head were found on a street next to the house, on the streets Once y Álamos, partially hidden inside a tree trunk at the bottom of a dry stream, and above the remains a front half of a tricycle was found.[1][10][11][12] DNA tests confirmed the victim's identity. According to subsequent inquiries, it was determined that on the night of November 13, Olivas would have gone to a bar called "California" on Nueva España Street and R. Alameda, where he met with Castillo.[10] He accompanied him to his home on Ninth Street in the same neighborhood, where after consuming methamphetamines, Castillo assaulted, raped and murdered him, hitting his head with a hammer until the skull was destroyed.[12][13] After dismembering the body in the bathroom, he then coerced with threats of killing a teenager to help him transport the remains. Both then returned to his home on Ninth Street, where they cleaned and painted the walls stained with blood. Castillo later raped the young man.[12]

Murder of Daniel Alfonso Rodríguez Morales[]

On December 13, 2015, more dismembered remains from another man were found, in exactly the same stream, very close to where the first ones were found. The body had only had its legs cut at the knees that were wrapped in a blanket, with the rest of the body also being partially hidden in the trunk, the skull smashed with blows to the head, but there were also two wounds by a .22 caliber firearm. Near the body, the rear half of the same tricycle used in the first case was also found.[1][12][14][15] All the similarities between the two findings, that of Lorenzo Olivas' remains and this new discovery, made it clear that they had been killed by the same person. The victim was identified as Daniel Alfonso Rodríguez Morales, nicknamed "El Troya", 22 years old, who lived in the same Urban Development neighborhood, and had been seen alive for the last time on the same day on the discovery of his remains.[14][15][16] Two years earlier, the victim had been arrested for trying to break into a car.[17]

According to the reconstruction of the events after the murder of Lorenzo Olivas, the murderer moved with deceit to the house of a friend located on Álamos Street in the Urban Development neighborhood, continuing to harass the teenager whom he forced to help him and made him move into his house on December 13. Castillo then invited his new victim to a friend's house, drugging him in front of the host and the teenager, and proceeding to hit him on the head with a rock to kill him. He forced the two witnesses under the threat of death to help him get rid of the body.[12]

Murder of Fernando Valles Gandarilla[]

The last confirmed victim was Fernando Valles, who disappeared on the same day that Daniel Rodríguez was murdered and his mutilated body found, Fernando was the brother of a "friend" of Andrés Castillo, Jesús Valles Gandarilla, who was the main caretaker of the latter, who had lost both of his legs in an accident. Jesús would declare that he knew that his brother had visited Castillo before disappearing, but he told him that his brother had left the house and did not know where he went. Jesús believed Castillo, thinking that his brother had simply "abandoned" him.[18] The truth was that Castillo drugged, raped and beat him in the same house where he had killed Daniel Rodríguez.[18] The body on Fernando Valles was found on December 18, 2015, under the floor of Castillo's room, where he had made a pit to place the body and covered it with rocks and cement. The face and entire skull were destroyed.[19]

Possible victims[]

Upon his arrest, Andrés Castillo confessed to killing 12 people, but according to the prosecution of Chihuahua, he might be involved in about 20 murders. Some of the victims attributed to the killer are:[2][13]

  • José Urías Hernández: beaten to death, his body was found next to a warehouse on Calle Industrial Sur N#1, on the Robinson Industrial Complex.[13][20][21]
  • Miguel Ángel Castillo Quintana: 21-year-old man, murdered on August 7, 2015; his killer had hit him on the head to kill him, and he was found on the day of his death in the Ferro-construction warehouse building on Nueva Spain Avenue. He was face down, naked from the waist down.[13][20][22]
  • Gabriel García Hernández: his dismembered body was found on August 3, 2015, beaten to death.[13][20]
  • Guillermo Juárez Portillo: his mutilated body was found in the Robinson Industrial Complex on May 8, 2015, beaten to death.[13][20]
  • "John Doe": the dismembered body of an unidentified man was found under a bridge on Pacheco Avenue, on November 29, 2014.[13][20]
  • "John Doe": the dismembered body of an unidentified man was found on the railway tracks in the interjection with Pacheco Avenue, on August 2, 2014.[13][20]
  • Gustavo Adrián Saldaña Hernández: his dismembered body was found on Cesar Sandino Street and Francisco Villa Colony on April 3, 2012.[13][20]
  • José Manuel Chavira Olivas: his dismembered body was found on R. Almada and Periférico Neandertal Street, on October 2, 2009.[13][20]

Psychiatric profile[]

Image of a toy tricycle; Andrés Castillo left next to the bodies of his penultimate and antepenultimate victims half of a toy tricycle

Andrés Castillo was characterized by profilers as a psychopath and a classic sexual sadist.[13] It is known that Castillo was the victim of repeated sexual abuse during his childhood, and in the opinion Nicolás González, the fact that all his victims were male and the way in which he committed the murders is a sign of the "emotional charge" of the abuses performed on him. According to the hypothesis of the criminal profilers, Castillo would've relived the sexual abuses he experienced by switching roles, where he was no longer the helpless victim but the perpetrator with absolute power.[9]

Within the modus operandi of the "Chihuahua Ripper", it highlights his obsessive behaviors as the fact that he used the same coping saw in each of the homicides and especially the ritualistic behavior of leaving toys next to the bodies,[7] according to a hypothesis of the specialists of the prosecutor's office these toys represented "the gifts that he could've received as a child",[9] apparently projecting himself as he was a child to his victims, culturally with the toys being a common ofrenda for a dead child.

Detention and conviction[]

Andrés Castillo was arrested on January 6, 2016 in Vista Cerro Grande colony,[1] as he was in possession of several doses of methamphetamine.[23] He emphasizes the fact that in the last of his crimes he would have been very careless in contrast to the previous murders, where he conducted himself in a methodical way that he left no evidence, believing that he would never be captured. On December 5, 2017, he was sentenced to 120 years imprisonment.[24]

See also[]

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e ""Descuartizador de la Desarrollo Urbano" fue sentenciado a 120 años de prisión – Fiscalía General del Estado". fiscalia.chihuahua.gob.mx (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 1 December 2018.
  2. ^ a b Shoichet, Catherine E. (7 January 2016). "Presunto asesino serial arrestado en México" (in Spanish). Chihuahua, México: CNN. CNN en español. Retrieved 1 December 2018. (...) Andrés Ulises Castillo Villarreal está tras las rejas, enfrentando cargos de asesinato por al menos tres casos... Los fiscales en Chihuaha, México, dijo esta semana que también han encontrado evidencia que vincularía al presunto asesino serial a otros 12 asesinatos donde hay "un alto grado de brutalidad".
  3. ^ "'Descuartizador de Chihuahua' violaba y asesinaba a hombres | Vang". vanguardia.com.mx (in Spanish). Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  4. ^ "PressReader.com - Connecting People Through News". www.pressreader.com. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  5. ^ "Andrés CASTILLO VILLARREAL. El Descuartizador de Chihuahua". Criminalia.es (in Spanish). 6 January 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2018. (...) Andrés Ulises Castillo Villarreal, de 35 años de edad quien atraía a hombres de diferentes edades a lugares abandonados, para ahí cometer sus crímenes. Una de las casas abandonadas, se ubica en la calle San Abel número 903, interior siete de la Colonia Desarrollo Urbano a donde llevó a varios bajo la promesa de ofertarles o regalarles drogas para consumir sin problema, en el lugar… Una oferta «agradable» para sus víctimas que los llevan a acceder con facilidad a la tentación...
  6. ^ a b Durán King, José Luis (9 January 2016). ""El Descuartizador de Chihuahua"" (in Spanish). Ciudad de México, México: Grupo Milenio. Milenio. Retrieved 1 December 2018. De acuerdo con el fiscal, el homicida utilizó en sus crímenes el mismo modo de operar, es decir, las víctimas eran seducidas con la promesa de consumir algo de crystal. Después iban al domicilio de Castillo Villarreal. Una vez drogados, el presunto asesino golpeaba con un objeto contundente la cabeza de sus presas, quienes, sin sentido, eran violados y posteriormente asesinados y desmembrados con una segueta que el criminal pintó de color verde para ocultar los restos de sangre. El hombre utilizó una carretilla para deshacerse de los cadáveres descuartizados en lugares públicos del municipio...
  7. ^ a b c "El descuartizador de Chihuahua, violaba y mataba exclusivamente a hombres | La Silla Rota". lasillarota.com (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 1 December 2018.
  8. ^ Shoichet, Catherine E. (7 January 2016). "Presunto asesino serial arrestado en México" (in Spanish). Chihuahua, México: CNN. CNN en español. Retrieved 1 December 2018. Castillo golpeó a dos de sus presuntas víctimas, luego desmembró sus cuerpos, según afirmaron los fiscales. Los investigadores encontraron el cuerpo de una tercera víctima enterrada en su casa. También está acusado de atacar sexualmente a dos hombres. Las autoridades dicen que los crímenes están vinculados con sexo y drogas...
  9. ^ a b c Durán King, José Luis (9 January 2016). ""El Descuartizador de Chihuahua"" (in Spanish). Ciudad de México, México: Grupo Milenio. Milenio. Retrieved 1 December 2018. El fiscal explicó que Castillo Villarreal colocó juguetes a lado de sus víctimas, los que posiblemente representan los regalos que le hicieron al presunto asesino en su infancia, quien registra constantes agresiones sexuales. Para González Nicolás, las víctimas, todos masculinos, dejan ver la pesada carga emocional que Castillo Villarreal tenía por los abusos en su contra. El perfilador estadunidense de conducta criminal, John Douglas, explica que la "firma" de un asesino serial (en el caso de Castillo Villarreal, la colocación de juguetes al lado de los cuerpos) es más reveladora que el modo de operar. Douglas define la "firma" como "un detalle personal que es único en el individuo: el detalle que lo llena emocionalmente"...
  10. ^ a b c d "Identifica Fiscalía a descuartizado: trabajaba en Bafar" (in Spanish). La Crónica de Chihuahua. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  11. ^ a b c Chihuahua, El Diario de. "Identifican al hombre que fue descuartizado" (in Mexican Spanish). El Diario de Juárez. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g "Le dan 120 años de cárcel a descuartizador de la Desarrollo Urbano | La Opción de Chihuahua". La Opción de Chihuahua. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Andrés Castillo Villarreal - Criminalia" (in European Spanish). Criminalia. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  14. ^ a b "Identifican al cuerpo hallado sin piernas en la colonia Desarrollo Urbano | La Opción de Chihuahua". La Opción de Chihuahua. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  15. ^ a b Chihuahua, El Diario de. "Identifican a desmembrado en la ciudad de Chihuahua" (in Mexican Spanish). El Diario de Juárez. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  16. ^ Digital., Tiempo - La Noticia. "A prisión 120 años el "Descuartizador de la Desarrollo Urbano"". tiempo.com.mx (in European Spanish). Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  17. ^ "Lo detienen cuando intentaba abrir un auto, en la colonia Desarrollo Urbano | La Opción de Chihuahua". La Opción de Chihuahua. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  18. ^ a b "Descuartizador mató y enterró al hermano de su amigo en su propia casa | La Opción de Chihuahua". La Opción de Chihuahua. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  19. ^ "Detenido un mexicano que descuartizó a dos personas y enterró a otra" (in Spanish). www.efe.com. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h Barajas, Luis (6 January 2016). "Historia de un asesino: "El Descuartizador" de Chihuahua" (in Spanish). Chihuahua, México: Radio Net. Net Noticias. Archived from the original on 4 December 2018. Retrieved 3 December 2018.
  21. ^ "Cae descuartizador serial en Chihuahua". www.cronica.com.mx. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  22. ^ "Identifican al hombre asesinado en la colonia Tres de Mayo | La Opción de Chihuahua". La Opción de Chihuahua. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  23. ^ "Multihomicida condenado a 120 años de prisión recibió otra sentencia por narcomenudeo – Fiscalía General del Estado". fiscalia.chihuahua.gob.mx (in Mexican Spanish). Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  24. ^ "Dan 120 años de prisión a descuartizador en Chihuahua". www.unotv.com (in Mexican Spanish). 5 December 2017. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
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