This Article is From May 13, 2015

Swiss Court Upholds Life Sentence for Guatemalan Ex-Police Chief

Swiss Court Upholds Life Sentence for Guatemalan Ex-Police Chief

Swiss court upholds life sentence for guatemalan ex-police chief Erwin Sperisenfor 10 murders committed in the Central American country. (Representational Image)

Geneva: A Swiss appeals court Tuesday confirmed a life sentence slapped on Guatemala's former police chief Erwin Sperisen for 10 murders committed in the Central American country.

Sperisen, 44, holds Swiss and Guatemalan citizenship and was sentenced last year after a three-week trial for the deaths of seven prisoners. The sentence was then widened to include three other jail deaths.

Having left his homeland for Geneva, Sperisen could not be extradited to stand trial for killing prisoners in the mid-2000s.

But Swiss citizens can be tried at home for crimes committed abroad.

The case was launched after a lawsuit filed by the mother of one of Sperisen's victims, and the trial opened on May 15 last year.

Spreisen was charged over the summary execution and subsequent cover-up of the murder of seven inmates in Guatemala's Pavon jail in September 2006 and for the summary execution of three prisoners who had escaped from the Infiernito jail in 2005.

He shot dead one of the Pavon prisoners himself.

Sperisen, who is nicknamed "The Viking" due to his hefty build and ginger beard, was appointed police chief in 2004.

He left Guatemala in 2007 amid a scandal that saw him and the country's interior minister Carlos Vielmann resign that March.

Sperisen's paternal grandfather was a Swiss immigrant to Guatemala, giving him the right to Swiss citizenship.

His father is Guatemala's ambassador to the World Trade Organization, which is based in Geneva, and Sperisen was arrested in the Swiss city in August 2012.

He has been in jail since then, with Geneva justice authorities arguing that there was too great a risk that he would flee Switzerland if he was released on bail.
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