Sunday, February 22, 2009

Ingmar Guandique



Although I am far from totally convinced, to say the least, the Washington Post seems confidant that the man in the above photo is the long sought after murderer of Washington intern Chandra Levy, who went missing sometime apparently in the early morning hours of May 1st, 2001, her decomposed remains (basically by the time they were found a group of bones) discovered in the vicinity of the Klegle Mansion in Rock Creek Park more than a year later. Her disappearance was all the talk on the cable news channels for months, up until the time it, and virtually everything else, was overshadowed by the events of 9/11. The controversy served to end the Congressional career of Democratic House member Gary Condit, the blue dog Democrat from her district in California with whom Levy had been carrying on an affair for some time.

The news media, and for that matter, it seemed, the DC Police, focused on Condit to the exclusion of practically any other potential leads or suspects. To this day, in a section detailing the timeline of the main events relating to the mystery, Chandra Levy's own home newspaper, The Sacramento Bee, seems overly obsessed with the Condit connection.

Yet, Ingmar Guandique assaulted two different women in Rick Creek Park right around the time of Levy's disappearance, for which he is now serving time in prison. Upon his release, under normal circumstances he would be facing deportation, being that he is an illegal immigrant from El Salvadore. Below is his home. Charming as it might seem, it is actually a small house with no running water or electricity, in an area where work is scarce.




As a young child, he lived through a period of revolution in his country, a period of violent upheaval during which his father was kidnapped and murdered, his body found some days later.

Guandique made his way to America by way of the Mexican border through the aid of a coyote-a person who for a fee smuggles undocumented immigrants into the US. Many who know him claim he has a violent nature, including his former girlfriend and her mother with whom he lived for a brief period, and who ordered him out of the premises. He himself claims that he will tell himself to attack if he sees a person with something valuable in a secluded spot, but that he always feels bad afterward. Yet, he has consistently denied having anything to do with Levy's death or disappearance.

A former cellmate claims Guandique admitted to killing Levy, but on the other hand, yet another claims he told him that Gary Condit himself paid him twenty-five thousand dollars to murder Levy, having approached him on the street in his car out of the blue with the proposition. The police decided there was nothing to the story.

Now, in the aftermath of the Post series, the police have taken a second look at Guandique, and decided that he is their man after all, even though former assistant DC Chief Gaynor is satisfied Guandique was not involved-this based not just on his opinion, but on the opinions of the seasoned detectives under him who had questioned and investigated the hapless and obviously troubled immigrant.

My question is, why now? How can they be so sure? What do they have in the way of evidence they did not have before, and how could they have acquired it?

There is something funny about this investigation. For one thing, the Post articles assert that the police, in searching Levy's computer, made a mistake in assuming she had been searching for Klingle Mansion in Rock Creek Park. According to them, she was merely searching the general area of Rock Creek Park, evidently looking for various different places good for a walk or a jog. Klingle Mansion was just listed at the top of the page on which she searched, as it is the headquarters of the Park.

The only trouble with that explanation is, at that particular time, Klingle Mansion was not the headquarters or offices of Rock Creek Park. Klingle Mansion, at the time Levy disappeared, was nothing but a storage building. Why would a storage building be listed at the top of the page for a Park as the headquarters of its administrative offices-unless of course it was then also used as a park rangers outpost? This would seem not only plausible, but likely.

This brings me to my main point. I never considered Gary Condit to be involved with Levy's disappearance, and was mystified by the narrow focus of attention on the Congressman. There were always so many questions. I wasn't bothered that those questions were never answered, so much as I was bothered that they were never asked.

Chandra Levy was a young woman of twenty-four who in addition to carrying on an illicit affair with a Congressman who was a married father of two children roughly her own age, was also an intern for the Justice Department, specifically for the Bureau of Prisons.

Her goal was to seek a career in law-enforcement or in some other aspect of public life, but somewhere alone the way her goals were derailed. For whatever reasons, her internship ended, and earlier reports hinted that she was not happy about it. The question becomes then, who did she know at the Bureau of Prisons? Is it possible she might have threatened somebody with the power of her Congressman boyfriend? Why was her internship ended so abruptly, according to most reports well before it was due to end?

She was already supposed to be on her way home sometime soon with "big news". Why then did she take the time to go to Rock Creek Park, and who did she intend to meet there, if anyone? Did she have something on somebody that she unwisely attempted to use as leverage in a vain attempt to keep her position, maybe even possibly gain a promotion in the process?

I realize that there are many people who go way off the rails in their attempts to solve mysteries, and I don't want to come off that way. I have read everything imaginable about this case. I have seen examples where it was blamed on some wild, nonsensical conspiracy involving the Unification Church. Recently, I came across this Geo-Cities website. Here, Chandra Levy has morphed from a lowly intern to a modern day Mata Hari, with seemingly unlimited access to all levels of classified information. and in this capacity came across information about the future 9/11 attacks and Oklahoma City bomber Timothy MacVeigh's connections to government agents and Islamic terrorists, among other things. Naturally, since Gary Condit was a ranking member of the House Intelligence Sub-Committee, she used her feminine wiles to get him to tell her all the secrets that he had privy to.

Oh yeah, and lest I forget-Chandra Levy was an undercover operative for a rogue branch of the Israeli spy agency Mossad.

Yeah, I know it all sounds ridiculous, because it is, but conspiracy theories are only unhinged when they lose all sense of perspective and veer into the realms of the absurd. That doesn't prove the absence of a conspiracy, it only proves the need for common sense and rational perspective.

There was nothing earth-shattering at work here, just, quite possibly, the case of a woman who went too far to get what she wanted and crossed the wrong person.

Of course, it might even be more simple than this. It could very well be that a young illegal immigrant from El Salvadore happened across the unwary Levy and assaulted and killed her, possibly raping her in the process. It could actually be that her body went undiscovered for so long due to a simple fluke in procedure, as the police claim. They were told to check within a certain distance off the paths, yet somehow this was interpreted as meaning to search so far off the actual roads. It could well be that the glaring public spotlight on Gary Condit, fueled by media speculation and sensationalism-and the desire of prosecutors to make a name for themselves by bringing a corrupt politician to justice-caused them to overlook the possible complicity of the young Guandique.

Chandra Levy's parents seem satisfied at the prospects that the case might finally be solved, which is understandable, and have stated their desires that Chandra's killer not be executed, but spend the rest of his life in prison, with no comfort or amenities. To me, that would be far more against the spirit of Freedom from Cruel and Unusual Punishment than putting a murderer to death, which is my favored option, providing the proof of guilt is more substantial than "beyond a reasonable doubt". It should in fact be applied only in those cases where there is certainty of guilt beyond all doubt.

As far as I can see, as of now this case doesn't reach either threshold. I could be mistaken, and I certainly won't go out on a limb and say that, as the case unfolds, I won't be convinced of Guandique's guilt. I really wouldn't be surprised at his guilt under ordinary circumstances, given the apparent nature of this young man, who even from his prison cell sent sexually suggestive notes and pictures to a woman, an insurance agent whom he had only seen in an advertisement. He is obviously troubled and violent. He was in the vicinity at the time in question. He would at first glance seem to be the perfect suspect.

But, why now, after all this time?

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Anything is possible in this case.He very well may have killed Chandra Levy, in the same vein i thoroughly believe it was Patst Ramsey who killed Jean-Benet

Anonymous said...

Patsy even

SecondComingOfBast said...

I never did believe that stuff about Patsy Ramsey killing her daughter. Frankly, I think that was some fucked up teenager, probably some kid that was a son on one of their friends. The so-called ransom note just looked like something a kid would write, plus there were a lot of video game references in it, though I can't recall exactly what they were. Or maybe it was some movie, I forget. Anyway, it didn't seem like something any adult would write unless it was one pretty damned retarded adult.

Plus it looks like it was somebody who knew they would be out and it would be safe to get in the house and wait, which they had been at a Christmas party. The kid, if I'm right, might even have been at the party they had attended.

There are a lot of bullshit crimes that are never solved because they are pulled off by asshole kids that nobody thinks to suspect, in my opinion.

Frank Partisan said...

I liked your post, except for the editorial about capital punishment. It was informative.

I hated the nightly panels on this case, on Larry King's show.

Anonymous said...

Actually it was documented that Patsey Ramsey mistreated Jean-benet, and that she did not like the fact that she wet her bed. I think Patsy killed Jean =benet in a rage over something like her daughters bed wetting. I dont think it was random, and yes a clever killer can write a note thats makes you think someone else did it. Unfortunately Patsy Ramsey is dead, so we will never know

SecondComingOfBast said...

Shadowhawk-

Patsy Ramsey might have been a harsh disciplinarian, and she might even have been not a very good person. That doesn't make her a killer. The police made the same mistake in the Ramsey case that they did with Gary Condit in this one. They latch onto a suspect and they suddenly get this tunnel vision. Their number one priority is to solve cases, and they want to go with what seems to be the obvious answer. It works out a great deal of the time, maybe even most of the time, but in this case, they just screwed up. With all the attention focused on the Ramseys, I'm sure they would have broken them if they or one of them were guilty.

Patsy Ramsey was cold and manipulative, and maybe a bitch, but she was just not that clever. I can't see her getting away with this. She would have broken, especially if the death had been an accident, which would be the most likely scenario involving anything to do with her being guilty.

They ran a DNA test on the semen found on the little girls panties not too long ago, and it doesn't match anybody in the Ramsey household. Back when the murder happened, the technology wasn't advanced enough for them to know that. Jon Benet Ramsey was probably molested and murdered (maybe accidentally) by a family friend, probably a teenager, who knew something about the Ramsey's and about the fathers work. Probably the son of a man Ramsey worked with, or even for. I would expect him to be involved with something like the Boy Scouts, and for his father to have more than likely a military background, or possibly a police background.

SecondComingOfBast said...

Ren-

Yeah, those nightly panels started out good, but after a while it was night after night of the same stuff, regurgitated in some cases word for word from the mouths of the same people. It was all ratings driven, and nothing was ever accomplished. It was a grave disservice. No one ever asked about her work at the Bureau of Prisons or the possibility she knew her killer from there. Everybody was so sure it was Condit it was like they never even entertained the possibility that there could be a different answer.

The thing about the death penalty was my way of saying I don't approve of it in this specific case. That carries some weight, since I am generally in favor of it. In this case, I don't see how there is any way possible it could meet any standard of proof. Even if he were to confess, he is such an unstable person, it would still be very questionable.