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Mexican authorities capture fugitive in slain nursing-student case

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In the family’s neat living room later on Tuesday, Miguel Chavez and other relatives huddled around a cell phone to call Alma’s mother in Mexico, where she was visiting family, and give her the news.

“Thank God,” said Ana Maria Chavez, weeping.

She said of her deceased husband: “He will see from heaven that there is justice.”

U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., issued a statement Tuesday applauding the capture. “When I spoke with the Mexican ambassador last year, I raised the Tolentino case and others highlighted by The Chicago Tribune with him and discussed the need to pursue justice in these cases,” Durbin said.

“Mexico has continued to make progress in its apprehension and extradition efforts, and I commend its law enforcement agencies as well as U.S. authorities for their work to bring justice to Alma Chavez’s family. But other Illinois victims and families still wait for justice in cases where fugitives have fled all over the world.”

The 2011 Tribune investigation documented law enforcement lapses throughout America’s international extradition program, using new Justice Department data and sealed warrants to identify more than 200 international fugitives from northern Illinois, and then thousands more from across the country. The U.S. Justice Department, county prosecutors and local police failed to work together effectively, neglected to keep track of their mounting caseloads, allowed cases to languish for years and committed outright errors, the newspaper found.

More than half of the Chicago-area fugitives fled to Mexico, a reflection of regional immigration patterns. In many of these cases, the victims and defendants were both immigrants, and often they hailed from the same villages or shared kinship and social networks. Sometimes the victims’ families knew where the perpetrators were last seen in Mexico and shared the information with law enforcement, yet no arrests were made. In the end, the lack of justice shattered the faith these families had in American government.

That is what happened with the case of Raul Tolentino.

The extended families of Tolentino and Chavez came from small towns near Morelia, and relatives knew each other from Mexico as well as in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood, where members of both families settled. Two of Tolentino’s brothers even briefly rented an upstairs room in the Chavez’s home.

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