Updated
Updated · Buenos Aires Times · Jul 9
Argentine Court Convicts Claudio Villamide Over 44 Deaths in ARA San Juan Disaster
Updated
Updated · Buenos Aires Times · Jul 9

Argentine Court Convicts Claudio Villamide Over 44 Deaths in ARA San Juan Disaster

3 articles · Updated · Buenos Aires Times · Jul 9

Summary

  • Río Gallegos judges unanimously found former submarine-force commander Claudio Villamide guilty over the 2017 ARA San Juan implosion, giving him a three-year suspended sentence and a six-year ban from public office.
  • Prosecutors said the 44 deaths were preventable because Villamide ignored the submarine’s deficient condition, pending safety inspections and a 100-metre diving restriction after its mid-life refit.
  • Three other former naval chiefs — Luis Enrique López Mazzeo, Héctor Aníbal Alonso and Hugo Correa — were acquitted after a trial that ran more than four months and 30 hearings.
  • Lawyers for the victims’ families called the ruling a historic first in Argentina but said they will appeal after the court publishes its reasoning on Aug. 21, challenging both the acquittals and the lenient sentence.
  • The ARA San Juan vanished on Nov. 15, 2017 after reporting seawater had entered its ventilation system; its crushed wreck was found a year later 907 metres deep, 500 kilometres off Santa Cruz.

Insights

A suspended sentence for 44 deaths: Is this justice for the ARA San Juan submarine tragedy?
If the submarine's fatal flaw was known, why was only one naval commander held responsible?