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Mexican authorities capture fugitive in slain nursing-student case

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — For 13 years, the family of Alma Chavez clung to dwindling hopes that law enforcement would catch up to the man accused of killing the soft-spoken nursing student.

Chavez’s ex-boyfriend, Raul Andrade Tolentino, was out on bond facing murder charges for the brutal stabbing in 2000 when he slipped across the U.S. border to Mexico. Stretching from Chicago’s Pilsen community to California and then Mexico, the fugitive manhunt was marked by blown opportunities and inexplicable delays—before it seemed to stall completely.

But a fresh turn has come to a case that exposed grievous weaknesses in America’s extradition system: Mexican officials announced this week that they captured Tolentino in the central Mexican city of Morelia.

Mexican authorities credited The Chicago Tribune with spurring them to re-open the hunt for Tolentino following a 2011 newspaper investigation that determined the suspect had been living in his central Mexican hometown. “We opened the case and pursued it and we finally reached the end when we captured him,” said Luis Lopez, a prosecutor with the attorney general’s office in the central Mexican state of Michoacan.

Tolentino, now 42, had been moving from apartment to apartment in blue-collar neighborhoods of that historic city, living under a series of assumed names and holding a shifting array of unskilled jobs, authorities in Mexico told the Tribune.

“He was one step ahead of the law,” Lopez said.

Tribune reporters previously found evidence that Tolentino had lived in Morelia, and Alma’s father had traced him there as well, passing along that information to authorities before his death.

Tolentino is now detained in a federal jail in the city of Hermosillo, in the northwestern Mexican state of Sonora, awaiting extradition to the U.S., Lopez said.

“The Mexican courts will have to rule with respect to the extradition based on existing treaties and understandings, and that can take months,” cautioned Chicago FBI spokeswoman Joan Hyde, who confirmed Tolentino’s arrest.

In Chicago, Chavez’s brother Miguel “Mike” Chavez expressed surprise and elation when told by the Tribune that Tolentino had finally been apprehended after 13 years.

“I am so happy to hear that,” said Chavez, choking back tears. “I just hope the law from over there (in Mexico) can bring him to justice.”

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