Text size: increase text sizedecrease text size

Unearthed: Fatal Secrets

How a journalist was silenced

ON THE NIGHT OF July 8, 1982, a dozen soldiers wearing black ski masks and carrying automatic rifles raided the home of Oscar Reyes, a journalist who wrote articles critical of the Honduran military.

Helicopters hovered above the two-story, brick house as Reyes and his wife, Gloria, were tied up and driven to an abandoned house.

They say they were stripped and tortured as accused subversives.

"I told them, 'I'm not a terrorist. I never have been a terrorist,'" recalled Reyes.

"They tied my hands behind my back, hung me from the ceiling and beat me like a pinata."

Reyes, now 59 and a U.S. citizen, lives with his wife in Vienna, Va.

In an interview, the couple recalled the torture they endured at the hands of Battalion 316.

Reyes says his ribs were cracked with rifle butts in one room of the secret jail while his wife was shocked with electricity in another.

Gloria Reyes, 54, says torturers attached wires to her breasts and vagina and shocked her over and over.

"The first jolt was so bad I just wanted to die. It was horrible," she said. "But then it was very strange, my body became numb. And when they shocked me again, I felt my body shake, but there was not a lot of pain."

She says that she peeked through the rags tied around her eyes and saw blood running down her legs.

"I started to feel sick," she said. "I vomited and I fainted."

Through her blindfold, Gloria Reyes could see the bare walls of the living room, the gray concrete floor stained with blood and vomit. In an adjacent bathroom, she saw a blindfolded woman crouching in a corner. She wore a flowered skirt splotched with blood.

Gloria Reyes remembers the woman's screams. "She said, 'Please, just kill me. Look what you have done. Look at me. Why don't you just kill me?'"

The abduction of the Reyeses caused such a public outcry that Honduran authorities felt compelled to release them.

After a week, the Reyeses were taken to a public court and convicted of subversive activity and sentenced to six months in prison. They were released after five months.

Cresencio S. Arcos, who was press spokesman at the U.S. Embassy in Honduras when the Reyeses were kidnapped by Battalion 316, says that they were not subversives.

"It appeared to be pointless," said Arcos, who later became U.S. ambassador to Honduras. "To silence him over newspaper articles was ridiculous."

Related topic galleries: Abusive Behavior, Firearms, Defense

Get home delivery of The Sun and save over 50% off the newsstand price

New arena for Baltimore?
Complete coverage of 1st Mariner Arena and possible plans to build a new indoor entertainment venue in Baltimore

Archived coverage:
2008 MSA results | FBI probes Sen. Currie
P.G. Co. prison death | City Hall, Dixon investigated

People and places:

Police Blotter
Crime briefs from Baltimore City and Baltimore County

Maryland gas watch

Find cheaper gas
Check prices at area gas stations by ZIP code and find the lowest rates in the region with our new interactive gas map.

Baltimore-area lowest gas prices
Historical gas price charts

Watchdog archive

Watchdog archive

Is there something in your neighborhood that's not getting fixed? Tell us where the problem is and how long its been there.

Area farmers' markets
An interactive map featuring locations, times, photos and other coverage of farmers' markets across the area.

My Maryland
Submit photos from around the state and view those from other readers
Also see: Charm Cityscapes



Reader videos | Talk forums | Trivia quizzes