Friday, 29 Mar 2024

Venezuela’s former AG shares photos of the body of ‘Rambo’ cop’s body

Venezuela’s former AG shares gruesome photos of the body of ‘Rambo’ cop and former action movie star’s body riddled with bullets which she says proves Nicolás Maduro’s regime executed him

  • WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT 
  • Luisa Ortega Díaz shared two photos of law enforcement agent Óscar Pérez’s body riddled with bullet wounds 
  • Pérez was a pilot for Venezuela’s criminal investigations and forensic services unit and grew accustomed to the corrupt dealings of high-ranking officials
  • On June 27, 2017, he led an assault on the Supreme Tribunal of Justice and Interior Ministry buildings
  • A January 15, 2018, nationwide manhunt led forces loyal to the Nicolás Maduro regime to a hideout
  • Pérez released videos on social media in which he said he wanted to turn himself in before he and six other men were shot dead

An exiled former Attorney General has released never-before-seen photographs of the body of a slain police officer which she says proves he was executed by forces loyal to Nicolás Maduro’s regime during a 2018 raid.

Luisa Ortega Díaz shared the images, which were taken by medical examiners moments after Óscar Pérez died last year, on her Twitter account. 

One of the gruesome photos shows two bullets holes, one slightly beneath the helicopter pilot’s left ear and another on the left side of his neck.

Another photograph shows several bullet wounds to his left arm.

Ortega Díaz insisted in her tweet that the forces executed Pérez despite the pilot and his men wanting to surrender to the National Police and Special Action Forces acting under orders of the embattled Chavism leader.

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Óscar Pérez (front center) was killed during a January 2018 raid after he led a June 2017 helicopter assault on two government buildings in Caracas, Venezuela, to protest Nicolás Maduro

Luisa Ortega Díaz, exiled former Attorney General of Venezuela, tweeted alleging the Maduro regime is responsible of executing Pérez (pictured) during a mission to capture him

The former Attorney General also said she has more than 300 photos and a forensic report that implicates the Maduro regime in the execution of a former cop and six other men

Luisa Ortega Díaz, Venezuela’s former Attorney General, says Nicolás Maduro and his regime should be held responsible for the execution of a former cop and six others during a 2018 raid


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In the coming days she will submit a collection of more than 300 photographs of the former law enforcement agent’s bullet-riddled body to the Coalition for the International Criminal Court, based in The Hague.  

‘That evidence leaves no doubt that what happened with Óscar Pérez and his group is a crime against humanity,’ Ortega Díaz wrote Thursday afternoon on her social media account.

‘This log of more than 300 photos will be accompanied by a forensic report certifying the execution of this group of Venezuelans at the hands of officials and paramilitaries who serve the tyranny.’ 

Pérez, a photogenic former cop who starred in a 2015 action film, Muerte Suspendida [Suspended Death], used a stolen helicopter to attack government buildings in capital city of Caracas and stole weapons from a military base in what he called a rebellion against Maduro in 2017. 

Óscar Pérez (pictured) died when he was shot multiple times during a raid. Luisa Ortega Díaz shared this image of his body

The 36-year-old appeared with a bloody face in nearly a dozen Instagram videos, saying he was surrounded by authorities shooting at him with grenade launchers even though he was promising to surrender 

A nationwide manhunt was launched for Pérez after he targeted a government building in Caracas in protest at dictator Nicolas Maduro’s government.

He served under Venezuela’s criminal investigations and forensic services unit and for years witnessed the corruption that took place between high-ranking members of the state and gangs allied to the Maduro-regime that were known as ‘colectivos’, who carried out robberies and extortion. 

In mid-June 2017, his brother was murdered after an assailant stabbed him to death over a cell phone.

His brother’s death prompted him to take the government to task with a video statement on June 27, 2017: ‘We are nationalists, patriots and institutionalists. This fight is not with the rest of the state forces, it is against the tyranny of this government.’

Later that day, Pérez orchestrated a grenade attack against the Supreme Tribunal of Justice. Blank firearm cartridges were then fired at the Interior Ministry building.


Pérez does have an acting past – having produced and starred in a 2015 film called Suspended Death in which he plays a cop rescuing a wealthy hostage from a vicious gang

Pérez went all out, playing a James Bond or Rambo-like figure willing to take on a regime that has sunken the oil-rich nation into chaos.

In December 2017, he broke into a National Guard unit  to steal weapons. 

Pérez spent several months on the run until he was cornered and killed during a raid led by the National Police and the Special Action Forces on January 15, 2018.

The 36-year-old appeared with a bloody face in nearly a dozen Instagram videos, saying he was surrounded by authorities shooting at him with grenade launchers even though he was promising to surrender.

‘They are firing at us with grenade launchers. We said we are going to surrender but they do not want to let us surrender,’ he said.

‘They want to kill us,’ added Pérez, seemingly wearing a bulletproof vest, as he crouched down in what appeared to be a small house and gunshots were heard in the background. 

Óscar Pérez (pictured right) led an assault on Venezuela’s Supreme Tribunal of Justice and Interior Ministry building in June 2017

Óscar Pérez intended to turn himself in before he was killed during a raid carried out by the National Police and the Special Action Forces on January 15, 2018

The agents stormed the hideout in the poor hillside neighborhood of El Junquito outside Caracas, killing Pérez and six of his men. 

Six others were arrested and accused of being members of terror group by Maduro and his regime. 

Ortega Díaz, who along with her husband fled Venezuela on a speedboat to Aruba before flying to Colombia in August 2017 after Maduro’s government dismissed her at the head prosecutor on the National Constitutional Assembly, contacted the family members of the deceased before sharing the shocking pictures. 

Maduro, and his right-hand man Diosdado Cabello, who is known to be the second-most powerful man crisis-stricken oil-rich nation, have been mum about Ortega Díaz’s report despite their daily constant rants on social media against anyone that opposes their socialist ideals.

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