In 1992, Ecuador was gripped by fear.
In 1992, Ecuador was gripped by fear. A teenager — Juan Fernando Hermosa — went on a killing spree in Quito and surrounding areas. He was just 15 years old. By the time police arrested him, 22 people were dead. He became known as “El Niño del Terror.” Under Ecuador’s juvenile law at the time, minors could not receive adult sentences — no matter how many lives were taken. The maximum penalty was four years in detention. Hermosa served the full term. In 1996, just days after his release and on his 20th birthday, his body was found near a river in Sucumbíos province. He had been tortured. Shot. Left dead. Authorities never fully resolved the circumstances. Many believed it was revenge. The law had limits. The street didn’t. The murders had unfolded with chilling randomness. Taxi drivers, small business owners, and ordinary pedestrians became targets in a city that once felt predictable and safe. Quito’s streets emptied earlier each night. Parents warned their ch...