Tragedy on the Rails
| AR Articles on Hispanic Immigrants |
|---|
| The Myth of Hispanic Family Values (March 2004) |
| Our Mexican Future (Mar. 2003) |
| Reconquista Update (Jan. 2002) |
| Pushing Out Whitey (Mar. 2000) |
| Documenting the Decline (Jan. 2000) |
| Closed Minds are an Open Book (August 1998) |
| Search AmRen.com for Hispanic Immigrants |
| More news stories on Hispanic Immigrants |
Juan Manuel Alvarez’s troubles had been building long before he drove his Jeep Cherokee onto the train tracks in an aborted suicide attempt that derailed two commuter trains and killed 11 people, according to family members, acquaintances and court records.
Alvarez, a pony-tailed sometime construction worker, had been separated from his wife for several months amid allegations that he had threatened her and her family.
Carmelita Alvarez alleged that drug use had addled his mind, according to court papers she filed in support of a restraining order. She described him as a jealous man possessed by paranoid fantasies that she was cheating.
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He and Carmelita met in Los Angeles about six years ago, said Carmelita’s brother Ruben Ochoa, 26.
At that time, Alvarez was not working much, said Sergio Lopez, who manages an apartment complex in Bell where the couple had lived for several months.
But he played traditional drums used in ancient Mexican Indian ceremonies.
Lopez said Alvarez was in a group that performed such ceremonies in Aztec costume—headdresses, loincloths and sandals with bells.
When Alvarez’s son was born, the couple gave him the middle name Nezahualcoyotl. The name is taken from a pre-Columbian warrior-poet and a Mexican city.
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(Posted on January 27, 2005)