Monday, August 19, 2024 -A 72-year-old Ohio man has been taken into custody twenty years after he was charged in a 2004 shooting death, and allegedly fled the country.
Antonio Riano, 72, has been on Ohio's
"Most Wanted" list for 20 years now, since the 2004 shooting death of
Benjamin Becarra, 25.
Riano's story was told on
TV's America's Most Wanted in 2005 but he continued to evade law
enforcement for nearly two more decades, even as he worked as one of them.
On August 1, 2024, Riano was finally
arrested and taken in after US Marshals reported finding him working
as a police officer in his hometown of Zapotitlán Palmas, State of Oaxaca,
Mexico.
Riano was wanted for homicide by the
Butler County Sheriff's Office after the December 2004 shooting, but allegedly
fled to Mexico to avoid prosecution.
According to the US Marshals Service,
the sheriff's office partnered with the U.S. Department of Justice's Office of
International Affairs, who then worked with law enforcement in Mexico to arrest
and extradite Riano.
He is now being held Butler County
Jail without bond pending additional court proceedings.
"The United States Marshal
Service, through our violent fugitive task forces, assists our state and local
law enforcement partners to apprehend the area’s most dangerous
fugitives," said US Marshal Michael D. Black in the statement.
"This arrest is the result of
the ongoing sharing of information between the agencies and the determination
of the investigators who refused to give up on this case."
Dubbed "The Devil" as his story
was featured on AMW, Riano's trail went cold after US Marshals attempted
to capture him with a 2006 warrant.
They'd tracked him to his mother's
house in Mexico, but by the time Marshals arrived, Riano was no longer there.
The cold case picked up heat in
January 2024 when the Butler County Prosecutor's Office received its
reapplication for the provisional warrant.
At that time, Chief Investigator Paul
Newton and his team used social media, including Facebook, to track Riano down.
While purportedly working as a police officer in Mexico, according to the US
Marshals' release, Riano had left behind a wife and three kids in Hamilton,
Ohio.
Newton said Riano "has been the
most challenging just in the simple fact that he really dug in then and went
underground."
After the 2006 attempt failed, Newton
said Riano moved again.
"We really didn’t see any
evidence of him until 2023," he said. "I think he thought he was home
free."
Now that he's captured, Riano is
facing two counts of murder and felony assault charges for the December 19,
2004 shooting of Becarra outside the Roadhouse Bar.
Police say they found the gun used in
the shooting in a hidden compartment under the kitchen floor of Riano's
apartment in Hamilton with bullets beside it.
Riano reportedly tried to step in to help a
bartender after Becarra was asked to leave the premises since he'd been part of
a fight there a few weeks back. As Riano and Becarra allegedly began to argue,
the bartender purportedly asked them to take the dispute outside.
Shortly after, gunshots were heard and
Becarra was found lying face down on the sidewalk. Surveillance footage at the
time showed Riano leaving the scene, but authorities were unable to locate him.
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