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Eleuterio Sánchez
Eleuterio Sánchez
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Eleuterio Sánchez holding a copy of his book Camina o revienta (Forge on or Die). Photographer: Luis Jauregialtzo, Argazki Press.

Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez (born 15 April 1942), known as El Lute, was at one time listed as Spain's "Most Wanted" criminal and later became a published writer. He was a legendary Spanish outlaw who escaped several times from prison after being convicted at age 23 of murder and sentenced to 30 years. He was only 19 and was sentenced to die. While in prison, he learned to read, earned a law degree, and became a writer, continuing to protest his innocence of the charges. He was pardoned and released on June 20, 1981, at the age of 39.

He published two memoirs, Camina o revienta (Walk or Die) (1977) and Mañana seré libre (Tomorrow I'll Be Free) (1979),[1] while he was still in prison. These were later adapted as a two-part film series on his life directed by Vicente Aranda and released in 1987 and 1988.

Early life and education

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Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez was born in 1942 in Salamanca, in western Spain. He was born into a desperately poor merchero peasant family while his father was in prison. He never received any formal education as a child and was illiterate.

Life

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Early life

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Sánchez and his family suffered discrimination as poor mercheros, who were nomadic craftsmen earning money as tinkers. They were often considered suspect by police and forced to move on. He married a young woman, Chelo, and they had a daughter. As a young man, he stole two hens and was sentenced to six months in prison.

Soon after his release, in 1965 Sánchez was arrested and convicted of murder for the armed robbery of a jewelry store in Madrid, in which a security guard was killed. At the age of 23, he was sentenced to death for the robbery and murder and also received "sentences totaling 1,000 years for other crimes".[2] His death sentence was commuted to 30 years in a military prison.[2]

Maintaining his innocence, Sánchez fought his conviction. Known as El Lute, during several escapes from prison, he was listed by the police as Spain's "most wanted" criminal. His reputation became legendary, and he was a symbol of resistance to the oppression of the poor under Franco. He was recaptured and used his time to educate himself.

Although Sánchez entered prison as an illiterate peasant, he taught himself to read and became self-educated. He earned a law degree, wrote five books, and published two memoirs while in prison. He continued his fight to clear his name.

Release from prison and later life

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After the change in government, Sánchez was pardoned and released on June 20, 1981.[2]

Afterward he married again, living in Tomares near Seville with his second wife Carmen Cañavate, and her two children. He left the persona of El Lute behind. In 1987 and 1988 a two-part film series was released about his life. Based on his memoirs, it was directed by Vicente Aranda, who portrayed Sánchez in the context of Franco's Spain.

In February 2006, Sánchez was arrested for alleged abuse of his wife, Carmen Cañavate, at home and threats on the street.[3] His wife told police he had abused her at home, and Sánchez was arrested in Seville. Under the law he could be sentenced to 20 months in prison, lose the right to bear arms, and be required to keep 300 meters from his spouse.[4] He was later released on bail.

In April 2008, the court found Sánchez not guilty; the judge noted that there were accusations of mutual infidelity, the couple were separating and arguing over property, and his ex-wife had failed to bring medical records, although claiming to have been treated for injury. The judge concluded there was too much contradictory testimony to support the charges.[5]

Books

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Bonilla, Kristina; "El Lute: die letzte Flucht." Roman, Piper Verlander, ISBN 3-492-02373-8. Munchen, Zurich, 1978

Representation in other media

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  • In 1979, Eleuterio Sánchez's life was the subject of a hit single "El Lute" by Boney M. from the album Oceans of Fantasy.[7]
  • Sánchez was the subject of a two-part film series by Vicente Aranda adapted from his two memoirs, El Lute: Camina o revienta (1987), and El Lute II: Mañana seré libre] (1988). Sánchez was played by Imanol Arias.
  • In the 2010 Spanish dramedy The Last Circus, which has a plot set in the 1970s, Eleuterio Sánchez is mentioned repeatedly on news broadcasts.

References

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Further reading

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez (born 1942), known as El Lute, is a Spanish and former who became one of the nation's most notorious fugitives during the late Franco dictatorship through repeated prison escapes following convictions for theft and murder.
Imprisoned at age 19 for stealing chickens, Sánchez was later sentenced to death in 1965 for his involvement in a jewelry store robbery during which an accomplice killed a watchman, with the penalty commuted to 30 years in a . He escaped three times, including a notable evasion in 1970 by hiding in a treetop, evading capture for periods and earning a reputation as a gypsy bandit amid perceptions of systemic . Pardoned and released in 1981 after 20 years of intermittent incarceration, he self-educated in prison, learning to read, pursuing legal studies, and authoring memoirs such as Camina o revienta (1977) and Mañana seré libre (1979), which detailed his experiences and claims of innocence in the murder. His story inspired biographical films and reflects broader tensions between individual defiance and state authority under authoritarian rule.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez was born on April 15, 1942, in a rudimentary shack in the Pizarrales neighborhood of , . This area was known for its impoverished conditions, particularly in the aftermath of the , which exacerbated economic hardships across the country. He was the third of eight children born to a merchero family, a marginalized ethnic group traditionally involved in itinerant peddling of small metal goods, trinkets, and quincalla (tinware). Mercheros, distinct from Roma gypsies despite occasional conflations, often faced and lived nomadically or in shantytowns, sustaining themselves through low-level commerce amid widespread . Sánchez's embodied this archetype, with his upbringing marked by extreme deprivation and instability in the "years of hunger" following the war. At the time of his birth, his father was serving a sentence, leaving his deaf and mute mother to raise the children under dire circumstances. This familial context of incarceration, , and economic marginalization contributed to an environment of survival-driven hardship, shaping Sánchez's early experiences in a society stratified by class and origin.

Initial Criminal Activities

Eleuterio Sánchez engaged in petty thefts from a young age amid in , where he later recounted his first offense occurring at age 7 as a minor . These early acts, often driven by survival needs in a nomadic merchero family, escalated in adolescence to small-scale larcenies typical of in post-Civil War rural . Around 1962, at approximately age 20, Sánchez was arrested in for stealing two to three chickens to feed his wife and infant son, marking his first adult conviction and imprisonment. He received a sentence of six months in jail for the , served in a facility where his illiteracy and lack of formal education compounded his marginalization. Upon release, Sánchez relocated to , immersing himself in urban criminal networks and committing additional robberies that built a record of prior offenses, though specifics remain limited to aggregated sentencing data from later trials. These activities reflected a pattern of opportunistic property crimes rather than organized violence, consistent with socioeconomic desperation rather than premeditated enterprise.

Criminal Conviction

The 1965 Robbery and Murder

On May 5, 1965, Eleuterio Sánchez, then aged 23 and known by his nickname "El Lute," took part in an armed robbery at a jewelry store on Calle Bravo Murillo in , alongside accomplices Juan José Agudo Benítez and Raimundo Medrano Medrano. The group entered the premises intent on stealing valuables, but the operation escalated when a store , acting in defense, was fatally shot by one of the robbers—accounts attribute the shot directly to an accomplice rather than Sánchez himself, though he was present and armed. Sánchez was apprehended by police almost immediately outside the store, while Medrano initially fled the scene. The robbery yielded a modest haul of jewelry, but the guard's death transformed the incident into a high-profile case under the Franco regime, where armed robbery combined with murder carried severe penalties. Sánchez later maintained in his writings that he did not fire the fatal shot and had urged his partners against violence, positioning the event as a botched driven by desperation rather than premeditated killing; however, authorities convicted him of joint responsibility based on his participation and possession of a . The crime occurred amid Sánchez's pattern of petty offenses, including prior thefts that had already marked him as a repeat offender in official records. All three perpetrators faced capital charges, with the elevating the case's notoriety and contributing to Sánchez's designation as one of Spain's most wanted fugitives after subsequent events.

Trial, Sentencing, and Initial Imprisonment

Sánchez was arrested shortly after the May 5, 1965, robbery of a jewelry store on Calle Bravo Murillo in , where an accomplice fatally shot a Civil Guard watchman during the commission of the crime. He was charged with armed robbery and murder, offenses tried under the Franco regime's summary proceedings, which expedited judgments for public order crimes with limited procedural safeguards. On May 28, 1965, a court convicted Sánchez of the charges and imposed the death penalty, reflecting the regime's severe stance on violent property crimes. Sánchez maintained his innocence regarding the murder, claiming he neither fired the weapon nor intended lethal force, a position he upheld throughout his legal challenges and later writings. The execution order was not carried out; instead, the sentence was commuted to 30 years of penal servitude, consistent with practices under where death penalties for non-political offenses were often reduced for younger offenders or upon review. Compounding the primary term, Sánchez faced aggregated sentences from prior convictions—including thefts dating to his adolescence—and subsequent infractions, exceeding 1,000 years in total, though Spanish law capped effective time served. Initial incarceration began in Carabanchel Prison in , a facility known for housing political and common criminals under strict Francoist oversight, where inmates endured regimented routines, physical labor, and limited rehabilitation opportunities. This phase marked the onset of his long-term confinement, interrupted soon after by his first evasion attempt.

Prison Escapes and Recaptures

First Escape and Manhunt

On June 2, 1966, Eleuterio Sánchez jumped from a moving train during a penitentiary transfer from El Dueso prison in Santoña to Madrid, where he was scheduled to appear in court. He was handcuffed to Emilio de la Pinta, a student escorting him, whom he injured during the escape attempt, leading to later charges against Sánchez for those injuries. The ensuing manhunt, led by the Guardia Civil, lasted 12 days as Sánchez evaded capture across rural areas, covering approximately 170 kilometers on foot despite sustaining injuries from the jump. He was apprehended on June 14, 1966, at the farm in Forfoleda, province, by four Guardia Civil officers after local tips aided the search efforts. Following his recapture, Sánchez faced additional penalties, including a six-month sentence for the injuries inflicted during the escape and a 5,000-peseta fine, compounding his existing 30-year term for prior convictions. This brief period at large marked his initial defiance of custody but ended without further incidents, returning him to stricter confinement.

Subsequent Escapes and Returns to Custody

On December 31, 1970, Sánchez escaped from the Puerto de Santa María prison in during celebrations, scaling the walls with the aid of accomplices and evading initial patrols by hiding in nearby terrain, including reportedly perching in treetops to avoid search parties. This breakout initiated a prolonged manhunt, during which he relied on networks within the quinqui (itinerant criminal) for , funds through petty robberies, and disguises, while authorities mobilized extensive resources including the Guardia Civil. Sánchez remained at large for over two years, from 1971 to 1973, during which he was designated Spain's most wanted fugitive, prompting nationwide alerts and public fascination that contrasted with official portrayals of him as a dangerous recidivist. In early 1972, he engaged in a with police in alongside associates, escaping the scene and relocating to areas like Alcalá de Guadaira near , where local support allegedly hindered captures. By February 1973, while attempting a traditional gypsy wedding with his partner Mari Carmen, he evaded a Civil Guard through quick maneuvers, though this incident intensified . His evasion ended on June 2, 1973, when Guardia Civil agents apprehended him in Seville's Juan XXIII neighborhood following tips from informants and a raid on a ; he offered no resistance but was returned to high-security custody at facilities like San Antón in Cartagena, where stricter protocols were imposed to prevent further attempts. These events added to his sentence through escape-related charges, underscoring the challenges Franco-era prisons faced in containing determined inmates amid socioeconomic factors like and cultural loyalties that facilitated his support base. No further escapes occurred after this recapture, as transfers and isolation measures were enhanced.

Release and Post-Prison Life

Pardon in 1981

On June 20, 1981, the Spanish , under President , granted Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez, known as El Lute, a full and unconditional , resulting in his immediate release from after 18 years of incarceration. The decision accepted a proposal from the penal review board, recognizing Sánchez's transformation from a convicted robber and murderer—originally sentenced to death in 1967, later commuted to —to a self-educated individual who had authored manuscripts during his confinement. The pardon occurred amid Spain's following Francisco Franco's death in 1975, when the new government reviewed long-term prisoners' cases for rehabilitation evidence, though Sánchez's repeated escapes had previously complicated earlier release considerations. At age 39, Sánchez emerged as a literate figure capable of producing written works, a stark contrast to his illiterate entry into the prison system two decades prior. Official statements emphasized his reformed status, including contributions to that gained attention from publishers and intellectuals. While the pardon restored Sánchez's civil rights without conditions, it did not overturn his underlying for the 1965 jewelry store robbery and homicide in , for which he maintained claims of innocence or mitigating circumstances in later accounts. The government's action aligned with broader amnesties and reforms in post-Franco , prioritizing empirical signs of personal change over retrial.

Rehabilitation and Later Years

Following his on June 20, 1981, Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez was released from Alcalá-Meco prison after serving approximately 18 years of his sentence. Upon exiting the facility, he described the moment as one where "freedom is now in my hands... and the responsibility is very great," reflecting an awareness of the challenges ahead in societal reintegration. Sánchez, then aged 39, faced immediate public scrutiny due to his notoriety, yet committed to a law-abiding existence, marking a deliberate shift from his prior pattern of escapes and criminal associations. Sánchez's rehabilitation centered on personal transformation, leveraging the self-education acquired during incarceration to forge a non-criminal identity. He actively sought to dismantle the mythic "El Lute" image perpetuated by media and , viewing it as a barrier to normalcy. In a 2017 , he explained dedicating "many years to trying to kill El Lute," emphasizing a psychological and social effort to embody his , Eleuterio, through disciplined living and intellectual engagement rather than . This process involved avoiding exploitative opportunities tied to his past fame, such as sensationalized public roles, and prioritizing stability, with no recorded instances of reoffending post-release. In his later years, Sánchez resided primarily in , maintaining a low-profile life focused on reflection and family. He occasionally granted interviews to discuss systemic and individual agency in overcoming adversity, attributing his sustained rehabilitation to internal resolve rather than external romanticization. As of recent accounts, he continues to for personal , underscoring that true stems from self-mastery achieved amid harsh circumstances.

Intellectual and Literary Contributions

Self-Education During Incarceration

During his imprisonment, particularly following his 1973 recapture and transfer to Puerto de Santa María prison in , Eleuterio Sánchez, who had entered the penal system with limited as a rural , engaged in rigorous self-. He learned to read and write through autodidactic efforts, initially relying on basic materials and within the facility, where formal opportunities were scarce under Franco-era conditions. This process marked a deliberate shift from survival-oriented defiance to intellectual development, as Sánchez dedicated cell time to foundational skills despite institutional barriers. Sánchez cultivated a sustained reading habit, immersing himself in , , and legal texts available through smuggled or access, which he credits with fostering and personal reform. He advocated alongside fellow inmates for improved conditions, including better access to educational resources, contributing to small-scale efforts for humanization amid repressive oversight. This autodidactic foundation enabled him to enroll in correspondence or prison-facilitated courses, culminating in the completion of a (Licenciatura en ) by the late , a rare achievement for common prisoners of the era. His self-education extended to writing, where he began drafting personal reflections and narratives that later formed the basis of his memoirs, honing analytical skills through solitary composition. These pursuits not only equipped Sánchez with legal knowledge to challenge his conviction internally but also transformed his public image from to symbol of redemption through , though skeptics attribute the feats partly to external aid from leftist intellectuals post-Franco transition. By his 1981 pardon, this phase had solidified his transition to authorship, with serving as a tool for both survival and ideological evolution.

Published Memoirs and Other Works

Sánchez's literary output began with his memoir Camina o revienta (Walk or Burst), published in 1977 by Edicusa while he remained imprisoned in . Written surreptitiously on rolls of smuggled out of his cell, the 525-page details his impoverished upbringing in , early petty crimes amid post-Civil War hardship, the 1965 jewelry store robbery and ensuing murder conviction, and his daring prison escapes. The book sold rapidly, exceeding 100,000 copies in its initial print run and establishing Sánchez as an unexpected literary figure despite his lack of formal education. In 1979, he followed with the second installment, Mañana seré libre (Tomorrow I Will Be Free), which extends the narrative through additional years of incarceration, including further escape attempts and reflections on systemic prison abuses under Franco's regime. Published amid ongoing custody, it reinforced themes of resilience against institutional , drawing from his direct experiences and contributing to public pressure for his . Post-release in 1981, Sánchez produced additional works, including Una pluma entre rejas (A Pen Behind Bars) that same year, a reflective account of his self-taught , legal studies during confinement, and the clandestine writing process that birthed his earlier memoirs. He later authored titles such as Cuando resistir es vencer (When Resisting is Victory), emphasizing perseverance drawn from his life, though these garnered less attention than his initial prison-penned volumes. Overall, his writings, totaling at least five books by the , highlight autodidactic transformation from illiterate convict to published author, often critiquing social marginalization without romanticizing criminality.

Media Representations

Films Based on His Life

In 1987, Spanish director Vicente Aranda released El Lute: camina o revienta, the first feature film adaptation of Eleuterio Sánchez's life, drawing directly from his autobiographical memoirs Camina o revienta. The film portrays Sánchez's early years in poverty-stricken rural during the , his initial petty crimes such as chicken to support his family, and his wrongful for a jewelry store that escalated to a charge, leading to his and first dramatic escape from prison in 1968 by hiding in a mattress cart. Starring as Sánchez, the movie emphasizes themes of social injustice under , with Sánchez depicted as a victim of against nomadic quinqui communities rather than a hardened criminal. Aranda followed with the sequel El Lute II: Mañana seré libre in 1988, continuing the narrative from Sánchez's recapture through his subsequent escapes in 1970 and 1976, including his time on the run with family and evasion of the Civil Guard. This installment covers his self-education in , family reunions during fugues, and the public fascination that turned him into a folk anti-hero, culminating in events leading to his . Again featuring , the film maintains a focus on Sánchez's resilience against institutional , supported by period-accurate depictions of rural life and pursuits. Both films received critical attention for their raw portrayal of Franco-era inequalities but have been critiqued for romanticizing Sánchez's criminality over accountability for violent acts like the 1965 killing during the robbery. No other major feature films directly based on Sánchez's life have been produced, though these Aranda works form a that popularized his story internationally under titles like El Lute: Run for Your Life and El Lute II: Tomorrow I'll Be Free. The adaptations prioritize Sánchez's memoirs as material, incorporating verifiable details such as his three escapes and 18-year sentence, while attributing narrative liberties to dramatic effect.

Documentaries and Public Appearances

In 2014, RTVE's Crónicas series featured the episode "Eleuterio, Merchero, Culto y Libre," which examined Sánchez's transformation from a marginalized criminal during the late Franco era to a self-educated and . That same year, Informe Semanal aired "El hombre al que llamaron 'El Lute'," a documentary detailing his escapes, imprisonment, and societal impact under the Franco regime. Subsequent documentaries included RNE's Documentos program episode "El Lute: Metamorfosis y fuga de Eleuterio Sánchez" on August 11, 2018, which traced his evolution into a cultural of tardofranquismo through archival material and analysis of his in . In 2019, TV3's Sense ficció strand broadcast "Eleuterio Sánchez contra El Lute," portraying the discrepancy between his real experiences of systemic marginalization and the romanticized fugitive legend forged in the and . followed with the same-titled documentary "Eleuterio Sánchez contra El Lute" on April 12, 2020, where Sánchez narrated his biography firsthand, emphasizing personal agency over mythic narratives. Sánchez made notable public appearances post-release, including a 1981 episode of TVE's Esta noche, hosted by Nativel Preciado with guest , shortly after his pardon, discussing his rehabilitation. In 1984, he appeared on Ahí te quiero ver with Rosa María Sardá and Paloma Gómez Borrero, addressing his life's trajectory in a travelogue-style format. He continued with interviews such as Jesús Quintero's 2006 conversation on Andalusian television, reflecting on his self-education and critiques of Francoist justice, and a 2008 TeleMonegal appearance on betevé. Later engagements included a 2013 La Sexta Noche segment on his shift from rebellion to authorship, a 2016 Canal Sur interview on electoral topics, and Pablo Iglesias's Otra vuelta de tuerca discussion framing all prisoners under Franco as political victims due to class-based persecution. also delivered conferences on his experiences, as noted in a 2005 interview where he resided in and lectured on overcoming marginalization. These appearances consistently highlighted his memoirs and rejection of glorification, prioritizing empirical accounts of poverty-driven crime over .

Controversies and Legacy

Debates Over Guilt and Systemic Factors

Sánchez consistently maintained his innocence for the two murders he was convicted of committing in 1958 and 1964, attributing his convictions to coerced confessions and the repressive judicial practices of the Franco dictatorship, as detailed in his 1977 memoir Camina o revienta. He argued that torture and fabricated evidence were used against him, a claim echoed in later interviews where he defended his non-involvement in the killings of a civil guard in 1958 and a jeweler during a 1964 robbery in Madrid. However, these assertions have faced skepticism from figures like criminologist Antonio Pérez Abellán, who in 2009 described Sánchez as a "common delinquent" whose crimes lacked any political motivation, emphasizing convictions based on eyewitness testimony and his pattern of armed robberies rather than systemic framing. No formal retrial or occurred after the , with his 1981 pardon by the government citing personal rehabilitation rather than , leaving the question of guilt unresolved in legal terms but fueling ongoing public contention. Supporters of his narrative point to the era's documented use of judicial against marginal figures, while critics highlight forensic and testimonial evidence upheld in multiple proceedings, including death sentences commuted by Franco in 1965 and 1967. Systemic factors in Franco-era Spain, including extreme and the 1954 Vagrancy Law (Ley de Vagos y Maleantes), which criminalized itinerant lifestyles and petty survival crimes among gypsy and underclass communities, are cited as precursors to Sánchez's trajectory from chicken theft at to escalated violence. Born in 1942 into an illiterate, nomadic family in Salamanca's slums, Sánchez's early encounters with the law—such as a three-year sentence for stealing two hens in 1957—exemplify how socioeconomic exclusion and punitive policies targeting "socially dangerous" individuals perpetuated cycles of without addressing root causes like lack of and economic opportunity. Debates persist on : while empirical data from the period shows higher incarceration rates for impoverished gypsies under these laws, analysts argue personal agency and repeated choices for armed confrontation outweighed structural determinants, rejecting deterministic excuses for .

Cultural Romanticization Versus Criminal Accountability

Eleuterio Sánchez Rodríguez, known as El Lute, has been culturally romanticized in Spain as a symbol of resistance against the Franco regime's oppressive penal system, particularly through his daring prison escapes in the 1960s and 1970s and subsequent memoirs portraying him as a victim of social marginalization. Films such as El Lute: Camina o revienta (1987) emphasize his self-education and defiance, framing his story within narratives of systemic injustice that downplay individual criminal choices. This depiction aligns with post-Franco cultural trends that idealize quinqui figures—petty criminals from marginalized backgrounds—as anti-establishment icons, often attributing their actions to poverty and authoritarian repression rather than personal agency. In contrast, criminal accountability highlights Sánchez's convictions for violent offenses, including a armed of a jewelry store where an accomplice fatally shot a , resulting in Sánchez's death sentence—later commuted to 30 years—for . He was also implicated in other crimes accumulating sentences equivalent to over 1,000 years, encompassing and related violence, though he consistently denied direct involvement in the killings. Court records and contemporary reports establish his guilt based on accomplice testimony and , underscoring that while the Franco-era justice system was harsh, the deaths of victims like the guard demand recognition beyond romantic narratives. The tension between these views reflects broader debates in Spanish historiography, where left-leaning cultural productions—prevalent in academia and media post-1975—tend to prioritize critiques of Francoism, potentially biasing portrayals toward exoneration of criminals framed as political rebels. Critics argue this romanticization, evident in quinqui cinema's aura of allure around delinquency, erodes causal accountability by conflating state repression with justification for interpersonal violence, ignoring first-hand victim impacts and the empirical reality of Sánchez's repeated violations of law from petty theft onward. Empirical data from his trial outcomes affirm that, regardless of regime context, tied to his activities warrant unvarnished condemnation rather than folk-hero elevation.

References

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