Criminologia Y Criminalistica May 2026
She called two experts to a meeting in her cramped office.
“No,” Marco said. “That’s the lazy conclusion. Look at the victimology . The first two fires happened at midnight—empty buildings. El Molino burned at 10 PM—the watchman was inside. Why change the time?” criminologia y criminalistica
But Laura disagreed. The pattern felt wrong. Accidental fires are chaotic, stupid. These fires felt… surgical. She needed two things: proof of how the fires were set, and understanding of why someone would burn beauty to the ground. She called two experts to a meeting in her cramped office
In two hours, they had a name: . A 48-year-old former architectural historian. He had written seventeen angry letters to the city council. He lived three blocks from the first fire. And his hobby? Restoring antique furniture using… industrial paint thinner. Look at the victimology
Marco pointed to a map on the wall. “Three warehouses. All historic. All slated for demolition by the city to build a new luxury condo complex. Silvio Herrera owned El Molino . He was fighting the demolition order in court. He was losing.”
“I visited Gerardo’s widow,” Marco said, sitting down. “I also interviewed the owner of El Molino , a man named Silvio Herrera. And I pulled the records from the first two fires.”
