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Antonio Correa Cotto (1916 – 1952) was the first outlaw to gain legendary status in Puerto Rico.


Early years

Correa Cotto was born in
Ponce, Puerto Rico Ponce (, , , ) is both a city and a municipality on the southern coast of Puerto Rico. The city is the seat of the municipal government. Ponce, Puerto Rico's most populated city outside the San Juan metropolitan area, was founded on 12 August 1 ...
, on November 24, 1916. His parents were Raimundo Correa Martínez and Angela Coto García.Nuestra Señora de la Guadalupe de Ponce: Libro 55 de Bautismos, Folio 298, Num. 893. He began his criminal career as a child and, by the time he was a teenager, he had amassed a long criminal police record.


Criminal career

On January 25, 1950, Correa Cotto entered the Colon residence in the Villa Olga sector of
Machuelo Abajo Machuelo Abajo is one of the 31 barrios of the municipality of Ponce, Puerto Rico. Along with Canas Urbano, Magueyes Urbano, Portugués Urbano, and San Antón, Machuelo Abajo is one of the municipality's five originally rural barrios that ...
in Ponce and stabbed 33-year-old Rafael Parissi Vazquez 22 times and 69-year-old Rafaela Morales Melendez three times. Both died at the scene. Additionally, Luisa Colon Miranda, Laureana Cruz, and Pablo Vazquez were seriously injured. It was his intent to kill everyone present in the home. A police officer who later attempted to arrest him was also injured. He was convicted of the two murders in Ponce and was sentenced to two life sentences in the state penitentiary. At the time of his sentencing, Correa Cotto swore that he would get even with those who testified against him and whom he deemed responsible for his current situation, including municipal judge Pedro Muñiz Ramos and district judge Lorenzo Lagarda Garces.''Asesino Profugo Juro Venganza de los Jueces.''
J. Cordoba Chirino. El Imparcial (San Juan, Puerto Rico). Tomo 177, Núm 7010, 31 Oct 1950. Page 7. Accessed 25 July 2020.


Escape and death

On October 28, 1950, inmates Pedro Benejan Alvarez, Gregorio Lebron Martinez, and Antonio Rivera Rodriguez instigated a prison revolt where two of the prison guards died and several others were injured. Having raided the armory, they armed themselves with guns and ammunition. One hundred eleven inmates escaped during the revolt, including Correa Cotto. Two days later, 68 of the inmates were still on the loose.''68 Profugos sin Apresar.''
El Imparcial (San Juan, Puerto Rico). Tomo 177, Núm 7009, 30 Oct 1950. Pages 1-4. Accessed 25 July 2020.
Correa Cotto was deemed among the most dangerous of the inmates to escape. Shortly thereafter, he made his way to a sector of Ponce called "Villa Olga", where he murdered 10 people.
LinktoPR.com (Hatillo, Puerto Rico.) 26 May 2006.
The authorities organized what was then the largest manhunt in the history of the island. They placed a bounty on his head of $10,000 ($ in dollars), either dead or alive, which was a first in the crime annals of Puerto Rico. The police detained over 70 friends and family members for questioning. On May 16,1952, the police was alerted that Correa Cotto was living on a farm in Hacienda Barrancas on the outskirts of the City of Ponce. When the police arrived, they called on him to surrender, but he responded by firing his gun. The police set fire to the sugar cane fields which surrounded Correa Cotto's hideout. He came out firing a gun in one hand and held a machete in the other. Under the orders of Captain Luis M. Pérez, the police opened fire on Correa Cotto, killing him. Correa Cotto was buried in Ponce's
Cementerio Civil de Ponce Cementerio Civil de Ponce (Ponce Civil Cemetery), a.k.a., Cementerio Municipal de Ponce, is a historic burial ground in Ponce, Puerto Rico. It was founded in 1901. It was designed by Manuel V. Domenech. Some of the people buried at Cementerio C ...
.


In popular culture

Three movies have been made about the life of Correa Cotto. These include the movie ''Correa Cotto: Así me Llaman'' (Correa Cotto: That's what they call me) (1968), produced by Antony Felton, which showed the popular impact that Correa Cotto's crimes had on the Puerto Rican society of the 1950s. In ''La Venganza de Correa Cotto'' (The Vengeance of Correa Cotto) (1969), produced and directed by Jeronimo Mitchel and Anthony Felton with the participation of
Miguel Ángel Álvarez Miguel Ángel Álvarez, also known as "El Men," (August 25, 1941 – January 16, 2011), was a Puerto Rican actor and comedian. Early years Álvarez was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico, and when he was a child his family moved to Bayamón, Puerto ...
and Lucy Boscana, the producers attempt to look into the human and intimate side of Correa Cotto.''La persecución de Angito recuerda las de Enrique Blanco y Correa Cotto: Las historias de Enrique Blanco y del puertorriqueño Antonio Correa Cotto fueron llevadas al cine y sirvieron de inspiración para merengues populares.''
Santiago Estrella Veloz. Revista A ora (Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic). Number 1216. 20 August 2001. Accessed 25 July 2020.


See also

* List of Puerto Ricans


References


External links


Movies about Antonio Correa Cotto
{{DEFAULTSORT:Correa Cotto, Antonio 1916 births 1952 deaths Burials at Cementerio Civil de Ponce Male serial killers People from Ponce, Puerto Rico Puerto Rican escapees Escapees from Puerto Rican detention Puerto Rican people convicted of murder Puerto Rican prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment People convicted of murder by Puerto Rico Prisoners sentenced to life imprisonment by Puerto Rico Puerto Rican folklore People shot dead by law enforcement officers Deaths by firearm in Puerto Rico