Gallery

Description

Born in: Madrid
Age: 35
Offspring: 1
Marital status: Married
Job: Labor lawyer and professor of History
Date of the attack: 24/01/1977
Place of the attack: Madrid
Guilties: Fernando Lerdo de Tejada, Carlos García Juliá, José Fernández Cerra, Francisco Corredera Albadalejo
Weapon: Automatic Riffle
Killed by: Extreme Right

Description

A number of lawyers specialising in employment law, headed by Carlos del Río, had opened an office at No. 55, Calle Atocha. On 23 January 1977, various lawyers met with eighty representatives from the private transport industry. At the time, the sector was in the midst of an industrial dispute and there had been a number of dismissals. The meeting ended at around 10.30 pm, after which the lawyers stayed on at the office talking. At 10.45 pm, the bell rang and the porter, Ángel Rodríguez Leal went to open the door. Two people entered asking for the trade unionist Joaquín Navarro, who was in a nearby café. A third individual stayed at the door. The first two opened fire, fatally wounding Rodríguez Leal. They then mowed down the lawyers with machine guns, fitted with silencers. Two of the victims, Luis Javier Benavides Orgaz and Enrique Valdevira Ibáñez, were killed instantly; another two, Francisco Javier Sauquillo and law student Serafín Orgado, died later as a result of their injuries. Another four lawyers, Miguel Sarabia Gil, Alejandro Ruiz-Huerta, Luis Ramos and Lola González Ruiz, wife of Sauquillo, were injured.

The attack took place a year and three months after the death of Franco, at a time when the country was gripped by a wave of violence, with actions by both extreme-right wing groups and terrorist organisations such as GRAPO. Four people with links to the far-right were tried and sentenced: Fernando Lerdo de Tejada, who escaped while on parole; Carlos García Juliá and José Fernández Cerra, considered to be the perpetrators of the killing; and Francisco Corredera Albadalejo, who acted as an accessory to the crime.

Enrique Valdevira, originally from Madrid, was married to Teresa Villar. Their son was just a few months old at the time. As well as practicing as an employment lawyer, he also taught history in a secondary school. He was a member of the Comisiones Obreras trade union and was actively involved in the Communist Party.

Press