Supreme Court of Justice hostage crisis explained

Supreme Court of Justice
Location:San José, Costa Rica
Date:April 16, 1993
Timezone:GMT-6
Victims:19 Captives

The Supreme Court of Justice Hostage Crisis was a 1993 attack in which five gunmen from a group calling itself the "Death Commando" group took over the Costa Rican Supreme Court in San José on April 26 and held 19 supreme court judges (magistrates) and five administrative employees as hostages.[1]

Four days later, after lengthy negotiations, the 24 hostages were freed and the members of the "Death Commando" were taken to an airport where they were going to take an airplane that would take them to Guatemala. The hostage-takers were captured in a spectacular raid before they were able to board the aircraft.[2]

While early suspicions had existed that they were Colombian guerrillas,[3] it transpired that they were actually Costa Ricans and that one of them wanted money for a liver transplant.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Costa Rica Gunmen Free Ailing Justice And Ease Demands (Published 1993) . . https://web.archive.org/web/20180121152751/https://www.nytimes.com/1993/04/28/world/costa-rica-gunmen-free-ailing-justice-and-ease-demands.html . 2018-01-21 . live .
  2. Web site: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette - Google News Archive Search.
  3. http://archive.deseretnews.com/archive/287622/GUNMEN-READY-TO-TALK-COSTA-RICA-ISNT.html Gunmen Ready to Talk, Costa Rica Isn't
  4. https://books.google.com/books?id=wBI0h_xEs30C&dq=Guillermo+Fallas+costa+rica+1993&pg=PA71 Adventure Guide to Costa Rica, p. 71