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Mexican authorities capture fugitive in slain nursing-student case

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A 19-year-old nursing student and daughter of two Chicago factory workers, Alma had dated Tolentino for about a year, but she broke off their relationship without telling her family why.

Authorities allege that in the early morning of January 7, 2000, Tolentino surprised Alma at the family’s Pilsen home, stabbed her to death and then stabbed himself in an apparent attempt to conceal his role. Chicago police immediately arrested Tolentino, and he confessed, according to a federal warrant.

But he fled a little over a month after his family posted a bail bond of $20,000. Alma’s family was outraged that the price of Tolentino’s freedom had been set so low.

The FBI soon gleaned information that Tolentino was with his mother in California. But when agents arrived at that address, they found the two had gone back to Mexico.

After that, according to a later federal warrant, “the matter was not pursued.”

After frustrating meetings with authorities in Chicago, Alma’s father, Bonifacio Chavez, took it upon himself to travel repeatedly to Mexico in search of leads. He slipped through the small towns around Morelia, discreetly interviewing informants and paying small bribes to interest local cops and officials in the case.

Finally, in 2006, Bonifacio determined that Tolentino had settled in Morelia, started a family and taken a job at a pizza parlor. The U.S. Justice Department recounted those findings in Chicago federal court papers filed that year accusing Tolentino of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.

The following year, Bonifacio Chavez died.

Then, in 2008, at America’s request, Mexican authorities issued a warrant for Tolentino’s arrest in that country. But the Mexican probe soon fizzled, according to a U.S. law enforcement source. In one instance, that source said, Mexican authorities knocked on what they believed was Tolentino’s door in Morelia. When the man who answered said he wasn’t Tolentino and wouldn’t open the door, the police simply went away.

When they returned weeks later with an American law enforcement liaison, the house was empty, according to the source.

As part of the Tribune’s 2011 investigation, two Tribune reporters and a photographer traveled to central Mexico searching for nine Chicago-area fugitives wanted for homicides and other serious felonies.

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