People v. Saltari Crespo

53 P.R. 850
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 30, 1938
DocketNo. 7186
StatusPublished

This text of 53 P.R. 850 (People v. Saltari Crespo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Saltari Crespo, 53 P.R. 850 (prsupreme 1938).

Opinion

Me. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 25, 1936, there was a meeting in the city of Mayagüez of the Coalition of the Union Republican and Socialist Parties. Several thousand people were gathered in front of the speakers’ stand. Mr. Santiago Iglesias Pantin was speaking, and under cover of applause from the audience, Domingo Saltari, who was one of the crowd, was able to make his way to a point about 3 or 4 meters from the speakers’ stand, where, drawing a revolver which he had hidden in his trousers’ pocket, he fired 5 shots at Iglesias. The assailant fled, but was captured a short distance from the speakers ’ stand, in the very plaza in which the meeting was being held, by detectives and onlookers who-pursued him. The revolver with which he had fired the shots was seized at the same time. He was immediately taken to police headquarters and, in answer to questions put to him by the detective- Juan R. Colón, he made the following voluntary statement: That he had been following him (referring to Iglesias) since some statements which he made in Washington in an effort to. “derail” the Nationalist Party; that he found out that Iglesias was going to take part in the meeting and got a place near to the speakers’ stand, and that while he was [853]*853talking and they were' applauding, he fired at him; that he wanted to kill Iglesias and that he had killed him, the detective Colón then explaining to him that Iglesias had not been killed. (Transcript, p. 26).

A little later the Municipal Judge of Mayagiiez went to the police headquarters and the defendant, after having been advised of his constitutional rights, freely and voluntarily made the following statement before that officer:

“Municipal Court of Mayagiiez, P. R., United States of America, The President of the United States, SS: The People of Puerto Rico v. Domingo Saltari Crespo. Sworn statement of Domingo Saltari Crespo. In Mayagiiez on the 25th day of October, 1936, before this court appears Domingo Saltari Crespo, residing at the place known as Dulces Labios, San Juan Street, in Mayagiiez, and, having been duly sworn, states: I advise you that I am the Miuiicipal Judge of this city, that you have a right to testify or not to testify and that if you do testify your statement may be used against you on the day of the trial of this case and your statement must be made voluntarily and without any offers being made to you. Under those conditions, do you wish to make a statement?
“Deponent states that he wishes to make a voluntary statement: ‘That my name is Domingo Saltari Crespo, I live in the ward of Dulces Labios, San Juan Street, Mayagiiez, P. R., I have lived in the same place for the last five years, and I am a cigar maker, I work in La Habanera where I have been for 8 months or a year, more or less, and I was working before in Pueblo Nuevo in the house of Francisco Rodriguez, known as “Araña,” also a cigar maker; deponent is a native of Rincón and has lived in Mayagiiez for the last five years. That I have been a Nationalist for the last five years, registered as such with the local Nationalist Committee in Mayagiiez where my name should appear; that the deponent has been for the last 5 years and is affiliated with the cadets of the republic, a Nationalist organization; that he holds-the rank of sergeant in the Rius Rivera Batallion. That affiant has no father or mother but does have a sister called Claudina Saltari, living on Echa-giie Street, Playa de Mayagiiez. That at dusk today the affiant, while the assembly of the Coalition of the Union Republican and Socialist Parties was being held, stationed himself close to the speakers’ platform with the idea of firing some revolver shots at the Gallego, that is, at Santiago Iglesias Pantin, Resident Commissioner from Puerto Rico [854]*854in "Washington; that as soon as the crowds of the Coalition Parties got to the Playa, I stationed .myself in front and close to the speakers’ platform with the intention and purpose of waiting until Mr. Iglesias should reach the platform and begin his speech to -Trill him, surely; that two orators spoke and after them García "Méndez. Miguel Angel, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, and then he began to speak after -having been introduced by García Méndez, and I was waiting until he should finish a part of his speech and they were applauding to kill him and that so at the moment when be finished a paragraph of his speech, I drew from my belt t'he revolver, Smith make, Secret Service Special brand, 38 caliber, or rather, S & W brand, automatic, No. 40830, nickel plated, black handle, almost new and pointing it toward the place where he was on the platform, I fired 5 shots, and it being my intention to kill him, I thought that I had killed him; people began to run, many of them pushed me and I fell to the pavement, I dropped the revolver, then the detective Toro came and caught hold of me and took me to the police headquarters where I made this statement. That the revolver with which I tried to kill the Resident Commissioner, Mr. Iglesias, belongs to me, I bought it in Aguadilla from someone whose name I do not remember; that I have had this weapon in my possession for 3 years.
“That it was from a handbill circulated in the city of Mayagüez by the Union Republican Party that I found out that Mr. Santiago Iglesias Pantin was in Mayagüez today and would take part in the meeting, where I stationed myself in front of the speakers’ platform to kill him, as I have already stated. That my intention of killing Mr. Iglesias was exclusively mine, and mine the idea as well. That for a long time I have had and do have the idea firmly fixed of killing Mr. Iglesias ever since he said in the United States that nationalism in Puerto Rico would have to disband.
“That about 11 o’clock today I went to the ward of Algarrobo to see some friends of mine, returning about 6 in the afternoon.
“That in addition to the five bullets with which the revolver was loaded which I used to kill Mr. Iglesias, I had 6 in my coat pocket, which I put in my pocket because it was never my custom to go about with bullets for only a single loading, because I always went around with enough for two; that affiant is a voter in the Mayagüez precinct, having registered as such ih 1932 and having voted in the elections in that year, affiant being without knowledge as to whether [855]*855be bas been challenged as such voter or whether his name has been stricken as snch from the list of voters.
“That affiant has been in the district jail in San Jnan twice to visit Mr. Pedro Albizu Campos with his wife, having been able to see him only once, which affiant now rectifies and states that he was mistaken in this part of his statement, since he had never been to the jail to see him, that he was at San Juan on April 16, that he saw him and talked with him and that he has not since seen him again. That the news which affiant has had that his shots did not kill Mr. Iglesias is a matter of regret, but what is he to do. That affiant is 32 years old and lives alone in a little room on San Juan Street, in Marina Meridional of Mayagiiez. That deponent has known Mr. Iglesias since 1920, that the first time he met him was in Aguadilla and later in other towns of the island; that the revolver which deponent used'for the purposes aforesaid was not declared or registered as is required by law.

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Bluebook (online)
53 P.R. 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-saltari-crespo-prsupreme-1938.