Delete
Killers of seven-year-old boy and man during shooting near Marbella hotel go unpunished
Crime

Killers of seven-year-old boy and man during shooting near Marbella hotel go unpunished

This is the background to the incident on 4 December 2004, when three masked gunmen fired shots killing little José Manuel and a hairdresser, and why the shooters have now escaped justice for the crime

Juan Cano

Malaga

Monday, 16 December 2024

The 4 December in 2004 fell on a Saturday and was, for many, the start of the Constitution Day long weekend in Spain. Mercedes Cañadas and her husband travelled to Marbella with their only son, José Manuel, aged seven. They were accompanied by her brothers-in-law, her father-in-law and a couple of friends, all from Seville. In total, there were seven adults and six children. During the summer holidays they usually stayed at another hotel in the town, but this time they chose the H10 Andalucía Plaza, a four-star hotel with a heated swimming pool for the children. They arrived tired from the trip and decided to have lunch in the resort's restaurant.

Mercedes exchanged a 10-euro note and handed it out to the children. Then, she went up to her room in search of a tablet as her father-in-law had a headache. It was 5.30pm - they had only been in Marbella for five hours - and the group was drinking coffee on the ground floor of the hotel. The children were playing nearby. Mercedes was walking downstairs with a pill in her hand when she heard the gunshots. She thought the children had bought firecrackers with the money she had given them. Then she began to wonder where they could have got them, and she was struck by a pang of dread.

Location of the hotel where the events unfolded

Mercedes remembers the people scattering and herself running against the tide. The people were fleeing into the hotel and she was running the other way. "Tita, they've shot at us," said her niece, who she met as she made her way towards the street. "Where's the cousin? Where's the cousin?" she asked. "I don't know," replied the little girl, who was miraculously was not seriously injured, although a bullet grazed her thigh.

In the vicinity, everyone reacted differently to the burst of gunfire. José Manuel apparently thought they were rockets and ran into the street. His aunt tried to stop him, but was hit by bullets and badly wounded. The friend with who they were travelling hid with her two daughters behind a flower pot, which was shot 28 times and served as a shield. All three were unharmed.

Little José Manuel died on the spot by bullets aimed at the Cosmo hairdressing salon, located on the ground floor of the hotel, where Alex B., known as 'El Chacal', was having his hair cut, and whom the police considered from the beginning to be the real target of the bullets. SUR published at the time that he was an informer, but there is no trace of this in the case file, nor of the activities that could have made him the target of a settling of scores. Nothing was or has been heard of him.

Upon hearing the first shot, Alex B. threw himself to the ground and lay face down until the gunfire ceased. He was unharmed, but not his bodyguard, who was hit several times. The hail of shots - forensic scientists counted 78 bullets - also hit Cósimo Pizzi, the hairdresser, a 36-year-old man who was friends with Alex B., whom he had met in Paris and who, according to the indictment, had lent him the money to open his business in the basement of the Andalucía Plaza.

Cósimo, like José Manuel, died instantly. The little boy's aunt, who was 28 years old at the time, was admitted in a critical condition to the intensive care unit of the Costa del Sol Hospital with shrapnel in her lungs and had to undergo 18 operations to heal from the multiple injuries left by the shots, from which she still suffers the after-effects today. Her two daughters suffered minor injuries, one from cuts and the other from a bullet graze. The bodyguard (42 years old) was hit in the back and thigh. He was also admitted to the ICU. He was remanded in custody at the hospital for illegal possession of weapons.

The perpetrators of the shooting were three men who got out of a grey Audi A-4 station wagon driven by a fourth individual. A British woman who was in the hairdresser's shop and who witnessed what happened - she was unharmed - told the police that she thought they spoke Arabic. All wore balaclavas, three-quarter length dark coats in mafia style, and used weapons of war. Reports later confirmed that they used AK-47s, also known as Kalashnikovs, the same model of assault rifle that is now sowing panic in neighbourhoods in cities such as Las Tres Mil (Seville), El Torrejón (Huelva) and La Palmilla (Malaga). Only in Marbella, it arrived more than 20 years ago.

The Cosmo hairdressing salon murders marked a before and after in organised crime on the Costa del Sol. In a society used to waking up every so often to the news of a gangland murder, the deaths of a hairdresser and a seven-year-old boy in a settling of scores to which they were strangers showed that no one was safe any more. That mafia activity could affect anyone.

The government reacted to the crimes by creating the Greco (Grupo de Respuesta Especial contra el Crimen Organizado), an elite police unit to complement the Udycos (the units against drugs and organised crime). This was the team that took over the investigation of the murders.

The police report

The police claim in their reports that the perpetrators showed "unprofessionalism" and that they fired "indiscriminately and bloodily" because they feared Alex B.'s reaction and therefore intended to ensure the "elimination of the target", even if "innocent people fell". Professional or not, nothing is known about the perpetrators.

The officers were suspicious of a young British man who entered the hairdresser's that afternoon to make an appointment and who, while waiting for his turn to have his hair cut, went out for a coffee. One of the hypotheses is that he marked the target inside the salon, as the shots were fired only a few minutes later, although this line of investigation was unsuccessful and the client could not even be identified.

They tried to locate a friend of Alex B., also British, who was a luxury car dealer and who mysteriously disappeared after the crime. Before leaving, he allegedly perpetrated a half-million-euro scam with which he apparently financed his escape, according to the indictment. His connection to the crime is unknown.

In 2005, an inmate in Alhaurín de la Torre prison asked for a personal interview with an investigator and told him that he had heard that Alex B. had had "problems" with a British gang and that the gang had charged an Arab group with settling accounts, however these statements could not be verified.

Investigators tapped several phones, including that of the bodyguard himself, who made it clear in his conversations that he knew the police had tapped his communications. They followed different lines of work, all unsuccessful, and after two years of secrecy in the proceedings they sent the court a report that buried the case.

In that document, Uydco officers claimed to have focused their suspicions on a Bosnian colonel who, after participating in the Balkan war, led a paramilitary organisation, the 'Grey Wolves'. They also followed the trail of the 'pied noirs' (literally, in French, black feet), which is the police jargon for members of organised groups of French nationality and Algerian origin. But that too was without success.

That report led to the lifting of the secrecy of the investigation and, probably, the end of the investigation. Although it was reopened in 2008 and even included several phone taps that revealed a kidnapping of which the police had no knowledge, the case was shelved again a year later when no new clues about the murders were uncovered.

Twenty years later

Mercedes worked as an agricultural expert in a warehouse in Brenes (Seville). The family lived in San José de la Rinconada. They have not become parents again, although they are still together. After the murder of her son, Mercedes began to study psychology at the national university of distance education (UNED) and graduated in three years. After that she did a master's degree in grief and trauma, becoming one of the few psychologists with this speciality in the region. Now she is dedicated to helping other families cope with experiences like hers.

The family, who spent "millions of euros" on lawyers to try to push the judicial investigation forward have not received any compensation. This 4 December was the most painful anniversary for them. The High Court of Justice of Andalucía (TSJA) confirmed to this newspaper that the murders of little José Manuel Contreras and Cósimo Pizzi will go unpunished as the maximum limit of the statute of limitations for crimes, which is 20 years, has been reached, and there will be no punishment for those responsible for their deaths.

Sigues a Juan Cano. Gestiona tus autores en Mis intereses.

Contenido guardado. Encuéntralo en tu área personal.

Reporta un error en esta noticia

* Campos obligatorios

surinenglish Killers of seven-year-old boy and man during shooting near Marbella hotel go unpunished