Guatemalan immigrant sentenced to life in prison without parole in deadly Vegas Strip bombing

By AP
Thursday, January 7, 2010

Man gets life in prison in fatal Las Vegas bombing

LAS VEGAS — A 34-year-old illegal immigrant from Guatemala was sentenced Thursday to life in prison without parole for killing a hot dog stand vendor with a pipe bomb hidden in a coffee cup outside a Las Vegas Strip casino in 2007.

Omar Rueda-Denvers protested that he was wrongly convicted before Clark County District Judge Michael Villani imposed a sentence determined in September by the same jury that convicted Rueda-Denvers and co-defendant Porfirio Duarte-Herrera of first-degree murder and other charges.

“I want to tell you that I am an innocent man of all the accusations that are against me,” Rueda-Denvers said through a Spanish translator. “I never solicited the placement of a bomb. I never asked anybody to build a bomb for me — that’s a lie. This was absurd and just a shock.”

Rueda-Denvers previously apologized and sought leniency from the jury that spared him the death penalty in the slaying of 24-year-old Willebaldo Dorantes Antonio.

Sentencing was postponed until Jan. 28 for the convicted bombmaker, Duarte-Herrera, 29, an illegal Nicaraguan immigrant. His attorney, Clark Patrick, gained the extra time so he could translate for his client a presentencing report that he received Wednesday.

Prosecutors accused Rueda-Denvers of supplying the motive — jealousy — and of accompanying Duarte-Herrera to the parking structure outside the Luxor resort to put a motion-activated bomb hidden in a foam 7-Eleven cup atop Dorantes Antonio’s car.

Dorantes Antonio, of Mexico, was dating Rueda-Denvers’ ex-girlfriend, Caren Chali, an illegal immigrant from Guatemala.

Chali, now 30, is the mother of one of Rueda-Denvers’ two daughters. She worked with Dorantes Antonio at a Nathan’s hot dog stand at the Luxor, and was with him when he lifted the bomb-laden cup off his parked car.

Chali escaped injury. But the judge noted Thursday that the blast sent bomb fragments across the top deck of the two-story parking structure — endangering anyone who might have been nearby.

Villani also sentenced Rueda-Denvers to a consecutive 16 to 40 years in prison for attempted murder with use of a deadly weapon, and folded in with it sentences totaling six to 20 years for felony explosives charges.

Rueda-Denvers’ attorney, Christopher Oram, said he plans to appeal.

Oram argued Thursday that Rueda-Denvers had no prior criminal record. But prosecutor David Stanton said investigators can’t tell Rueda-Denvers’ background because he never provided his real name.

Rueda-Denvers also uses the name Alexander Perez. Stanton said a man in Panama named Omar Rueda-Denvers contacted federal investigators in 2007 to protest that his name was linked with the bombing in Las Vegas.

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