On Monday this week, officers received a call about a body in the 1100 block of South 13th Street. The chief said investigators have been working this case since then, and, “It just so happens we ran into him and had an encounter with him. Unbeknownst to us, he had committed this murder.”
After the body of the unidentified person was discovered Monday, investigators interviewed Garcia-Gutierrez Tuesday night.
On Wednesday afternoon, the identity of the victim had not been released by the Butler County Coroner’s Office because family had not yet been notified.
In a 911 call obtained by the Journal-News using public records laws, a male caller spoke in English and Spanish that was difficult to understand even through and interpreter. He said, “One person in the garage ... he is dead, he is dead.”
He said he had not seen the person in “a couple days. I come back and he’s dead.”
Garcia-Gutierrez was an example used by Butler County Sheriff Richard Jones in a press conference expressing his frustrations with the Biden Administration’s immigration enforcement and border policies. The sheriff said Friday that Garcia-Gutierrez was arrested for carrying a concealed weapon, having a weapon while intoxicated and obstruction, and he was detained on an ICE holder.
Jones said Garcia-Gutierrez had also been to prison three times and deported seven times to Mexico, but keeps returning.
“Says it takes him two weeks to get back,” the sheriff said.
Before the aggravated murder charge, Garcia-Gutierrez had been facing two years and seven months in prison. The new charge could lead to a 30-year prison sentence or death.
He was arraigned Wednesday morning in Hamilton Municipal Court, and an April 10 hearing has been scheduled.
On Friday, Jones said that since July 1, 2021, the Butler County Jail has housed 999 illegal immigrants with holders for deportation. Those 999 inmates have faced 1,757 state and local charges, Jones said, and the cost to house them in the jail is $1,816,796.