February 11, 2009?
(AP) A mentally disturbed American accused of
killing two people and wounding seven by setting off bombs in Bolivian
hotels said Thursday that he had "done nothing" wrong as a Bolivian
judge formally charged him and his Uruguayan lover with murder and
falsifying documents.
Triston Jay Amero, 24, and his pregnant partner,
Alda Ribeiro, 45, were ordered held in "preventive detention" pending
trial by Judge Williams Davila, who said he would evaluate Amero's
request for a psychiatric evaluation as well as the pregnant Ribeiro's
request for a medical exam.
The bombings were denounced as "terrorist" by an
angry President Evo Morales, prompting an equally emphatic response
from the U.S. State Department, which said the Bolivian leader's
remark harmed their governments' efforts to cooperate against
terrorism.
As it turns out, Amero has been in and out of
psychiatric hospitals since he was 7 years old after making constant
threats of suicide and violence against authorities, according to
court documents obtained by the Associated Press. He also spent years
in California's juvenile prisons after being convicted of fleeing the
scene of an accident and spitting on a judge and court clerk.
He even created lists of people he would kill when
released including his mother, and former U.S. President Bill
Clinton.
"Amero keeps to himself and appears to like to be
seen as a rebel and outlaw," corrections officials wrote in court
documents.
Bolivian authorities have struggled to understand
the motives of a man who has described himself as a Saudi Arabian
lawyer, a pagan high priest, a notary public and even a vampire,
having adopted "Lestat Claudius de Orleans y Montevideo" as his name,
a variation on the character in Anne Rice's dark novels, played on
film by Tom Cruise.
But this "Lestat" isn't the Hollywood type in a
blog from Colombia two years ago, he described himself as "so
repulsive in apearance and dress and religeous practice to the women
of Colombia that even prostitutes wilnot take My Money."(sic)
Amero did eventually find a woman Ribeiro who
said Thursday that her "husband" was alone responsible for the
bombings. Police said they weren't sure if the two were formally
married.
"He has done something very bad against Bolivia and
against these innocent people," Ribeiro said in a television interview
from jail. "He did all this behind my back, I didn't know anything
about this."
Amero also was interviewed saying "I am sorry
about the victims," but denying he was guilty.
Amero obtained a "world passport" under his given
name in 2003 and changed it in 2004 to Lestat Claudius de Orleans y
Montevideo, said David Gallup, president and general counsel of the
World Service Authority, a Washington D.C.-based advocacy group. The
group's Web site says it "represents the inalienable human right of
freedom of travel on planet Earth."
Amero regularly updated Gallup on his exploits, and
the group has kept an extensive file, documenting his travel to
Colombia, Paraguay, Uruguay, Argentina and Bolivia, as well as his
efforts to renounce his U.S. citizenship and his time in jail in
Argentina, where police said he tried to bomb an ATM machine.
"It's been a while that he's been trying to get out
of the U.S. system," Gallup said. "Finally he made it to Latin
America."
The couple also perpetrated attacks in other
Bolivian cities that left no victims, La Paz district attorney Jorge
Gutierrez said.
Amero applied for Bolivian residency in January,
and told Gallup he was passing the New Year in Potosi, Bolivia, a
mining community where sticks of dynamite are sold out of stalls at a
market open to all.
In La Paz, Ribeiro was giving away calendars with
a nude picture of herself holding a cardboard box of explosives
promoting "the sale and export of explosives, fireworks and liquor,"
said Marta Silva, who owns a store across from one of the bombed
hotels.
The bombings Tuesday night and Wednesday morning
killed two Bolivians. The injured included a U.S. citizen identified
as Jessica Wilson, who was treated and released. Police said they used
110 dynamite cartridges in each attack, hoping to kill 150 people, and
were planning a third bombing of the Chilean consulate a charge
denied by Amero.
Police said the motive may have been "religious"
Amero told them he was a practicing pagan high priest and that Amero
had hoped the bombings would gain him allies through media coverage,
district attorney Carlos Fiorilo Thursday.
Morales denounced the crimes as an attack on
Bolivia's democracy, and angrily blamed the United States: "This
American was putting bombs in hotels," Morales said. "The U.S.
government fights terrorism, and they send us terrorists."
U.S. diplomats countered with a statement Thursday
condemning the bombings and expressing "concern" and "surprise" over
Morales' remarks. "Declarations such as these impede our efforts and
block our capacity to cooperate" in anti-terrorism efforts, the U.S.
Embassy in La Paz said in a statement Thursday.
In his blog from Colombia and in his communications
to the advocacy group, Amero repeatedly describes himself as a loner,
a "political refugee" and "the Superman of Loosers" whose strongest
desire is to distance himself from the United States.
His aunt, Paula Amero of Forest Ranch, California,
told the AP Thursday that "he didn't need to be locked up" in
California.
And Amero's mother, Dawna Scheda of Placerville,
California, told the AP that "Of course we don't believe he would do
something like this. He's my son."
But Amador County District Attorney Todd Riebe said
they had concluded he was a danger to himself and others. "He is a
very disturbed man, and given his past, I think he would be fully
capable of doing this."
Associated Press writers Kimberly Chase in Mexico
City and Jordan Robertson in San Francisco contributed to this report.
The blast, close to government headquarters,
occurred late on Tuesday. Hours later, another hotel in the city was
rocked by an explosion.
Several buildings were damaged and at least five
people are known to have been injured in the two explosions.
Officials said two foreigners had been detained
over the blasts, believed to have been caused by explosives.
Attorney General Jorge Gutierrez said a Uruguayan
woman and an American man had been arrested at a hotel in El Alto,
12km (seven miles) outside La Paz.
The first explosion rocked the Linares hotel on
Wednesday at 2150 local time (0150 GMT).
Local media say the fatal victims were a young
couple. The man was killed instantly, and the woman died later in
hospital.
The blast destroyed two floors of the hotel and the
windows of surrounding buildings.
The second explosion reportedly occurred at 0145
local time (0545 GMT) at the Riosinho hotel and also caused extensive
damage to properties in the area.
Police suspect plastic explosives may have been
used.