Crime & Safety
Arrested In Waltham, Wanted In Connection To Guatemalan Massacre
The Guatemala national was found in Waltham. He was wanted in Guatemala for participating in mass sexual assault of indigenous women.

WALTHAM, MA – A man police found in Waltham and wanted for his role in the massacre of indigenous Guatemalans in the 1980s pleaded guilty today to coming into the U.S. illegally in federal court in Boston, the U.S. Attorney Andrew Lelling announced.
Francisco Cuxum Alvarado, also known as Francisco Cuxun-Alvarado, 64, pleaded guilty to one count of illegal reentry into the United States. On May 29, Cuxum Alvarado was indicted and has been detained since that time.
Beginning in the early 1980s, there were a series of attacks committed against the indigenous Maya Achi people of Rio Negro, in and around the municipality of Rabinal, in Guatemala. During these massacres, Guatemalan armed forces assisted by civilian militias known as the Civil Defense Patrols (PACs), forcibly removed the Maya Achi from Rio Negro and attacked and killed hundreds of them.
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More than 400 Maya Achi people were killed in the Rio Negro massacres and hundreds of others were forcibly removed from their homes. In addition to the murders, there were mass sexual assaults carried out against Achi-Mayan women.
Cuxum Alvarado was a member of the PAC in Rabinal, and in 1998, was named as a suspect in the March 13, 1982, massacre of women and children at Cerro Pacoxom, according to court documents.
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In 2018, the Guatemalan government charged the man with crimes against humanity for participating in the mass sexual assault of Maya Achi women in and around Rabinal. In connection with the charges, the Guatemalan government obtained an INTERPOL Red Notice for Cuxum Alvarado’s arrest, which is a request to law enforcement agencies worldwide to locate and provisionally arrest suspects pending extradition to the jurisdiction in which they are charged. On April 30, police found him in Waltham and arrested him.
Cuxum Alvarado told police that he was a member of the Rabinal PAC. At the time of his arrest, Cuxum Alvarado was unlawfully in the States. He previously unlawfully entered the country in March 2004 in Arizona, and was ordered to be removed.
The charging statute provides for a sentence of up to two years in prison, one year of supervised release and a fine of $250,000. He will be subject to deportation upon completion of any sentence imposed.
U.S. District Court Judge Indira Talwani scheduled sentencing for Dec. 20. Cuxum Alvarado will be subject to extradition to Guatemala following any sentence imposed.
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