Twenty-five inmates, most of them Venezuelan, were transferred from the prison Sullana to the penitentiary establishments of Trujillo and Cajamarca, because they had wanted to carry out a mutiny and have a fight with Peruvian inmates inside this prison.
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The transfer took place at approximately 3 in the morning on Sunday, November 9, when a contingent of more than thirty police officers arrived at the prison located on María Auxiliadora Street, in Sullana.
There, one by one and covered with their quilts and belongings, the inmates were taken out of the facility and loaded into the vehicles of the INPE (National Penitentiary Institute). This, under strict police protection around the area.
The inmates, mostly Venezuelans and other nationalities, as well as some Peruvians who were transferred to the prisons in the cities of Trujillo and Cajamarca, are serving sentences for different crimes.
Four of them for the crime of aggravated robbery, ten for illicit drug trafficking, two for sexual rape of minors, two for extortion, one for aggravated homicide and another for attempted patricide.
Likewise, two for human trafficking, one for pimping, one for ammunition trafficking and another internal for another crime.
It was learned that the transfer was due to the fact that INPE representatives had information that the foreign inmates had been rebelling against the INPE agents and had been preparing a mutiny in the Sullana prison.
At the same time, it was learned that, in recent days, fights had broken out inside the prison, which were led by Venezuelan women against Peruvian women.
