A five-year-old girl was kidnapped in broad daylight in a residential complex in California specifically chosen for its safety. The suspect was identified in just 72 hours. The impossible: he had already been acquitted of child molestation a year earlier.
In this episode, you will discover how a man judged and declared innocent of child abuse managed to access another victim before the system could stop him, and why the case took three years to go to trial because every piece of evidence had to be shielded against accusations of investigative fabrication.
Case Details
Victim: Samantha Runion, 5 years old, California resident
Date: July 15, 2002
Location: Stanton, California, United States
Status: Perpetrator on death row since 2005; de facto moratorium on executions
- The suspect's alibi placed him 50 kilometers away, but cell records placed him exactly in the neighborhood at the time of the crime, a contradiction that was never fully explained.
- A previous acquittal for child abuse in 2001 did not prevent Ávila from remaining close to the same residential complex where his new victim lived, exposing a critical gap in the system.
- The DNA under the girl's nails was questioned by the defense as possible investigative manipulation, a forensic tension that persists in court records.
- Erin, the mother, practiced safety drills with Samantha to prepare her for dangers. Still, she was captured in seconds through simple deception: the search for a lost puppy.
How did a justice system acquit a predator and then allow him to kill a girl before it could stop him?
Samantha Runion kidnapping, Alejandro Ávila predator, child murder California 2002, Amber Alert origin, sexual abuse minors, unsolved crime justice, child justice, true crime case true crime Spanish podcast
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