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		<title>Police: Valero hanged himself in cell</title>
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		<description>NBey6's Blog: Police: Valero hanged himself in cell</description>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Police: Valero hanged himself in cell</title>
			<link>/blogentry/39936</link>
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			<pubDate>Mon, 19 Apr 2010 16:20:36 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>NBey6</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>Monday, April 19, 2010<br /><br />Police say Valero hanged himself in cell<br /><br />Associated Press<br /><br />CARACAS, Venezuela -- Former boxing champ Edwin Valero committed suicide in his jail cell on Monday just hours after he was arrested in his wife&#x27;s killing, police said.<br /><br />The former lightweight champion used his own clothes to hang himself from a bar in his cell early Monday, Venezuelan Federal Police Chief Wilmer Flores told reporters.<br /><br />He said Valero was found by another inmate, who alerted authorities in the police lockup in north-central Carabobo state. Valero still showed signs of life when they took him down, but they were unable to save him and he died about 1:30 a.m., Flores said.<br /><br />The 28-year-old was detained Sunday on suspicion of killing his wife. Prosecutors said Sunday night that they had planned to charge Valero in the killing.<br /><br />Valero was detained after police found the body of his 24-year-old wife in a hotel in Valencia. The boxer left the hotel room around dawn Sunday and allegedly told security he had killed Jennifer Viera, Flores said.<br /><br />The fighter was a household name in Venezuela and had an image of President Hugo Chavez tattooed on his chest, along with the country&#x27;s yellow, blue and red flag.<br /><br />His all-action style and 27-0 record -- all by knockouts -- earned him a reputation as a tough, explosive crowd-pleaser. Venezuelans called him Inca, alluding to an Indian warrior, while elsewhere he was called Dinamita, or dynamite.<br /><br />The former WBA super featherweight and WBC lightweight champion had been in trouble with the law before.<br /><br />Last month, Valero was charged with harassing his wife and threatening medical personnel who treated her at a hospital in the western city of Merida. Police arrested Valero following an argument with a doctor and nurse at the hospital, where his wife was being treated for a series of injuries, including a punctured lung and broken ribs.<br /><br />The Attorney General&#x27;s Office said in a statement that Valero was detained March 25 on suspicion of assaulting his wife, but his wife told a police officer her injuries were due to a fall. When the boxer arrived moments later, he forbade Viera from speaking to the police officer, and spoke threateningly to the officer, prosecutors said in a statement.<br /><br />The Attorney General&#x27;s Office said a prosecutor had asked a court to order Valero jailed but that the judge instead placed him under a restraining order that barred him from going near his wife, a condition he repeatedly violated.<br /><br />Police found three stab wounds on Viera&#x27;s body, but investigators who searched the hotel rooms had yet to find the weapon used in the killing, Flores said.<br /><br />In the ring, Valero shot to fame when he won his first 18 fights by first-round knockout, setting a record that has since been eclipsed by Tyrone Brunson. Valero last fought in February, stopping Antonio DeMarco in a fight in Monterrey, Mexico.<br /><br />He was replaced as WBC lightweight champion in February after he expressed a desire to campaign in a higher weight division, WBC president Jose Sulaiman said.<br /><br />Valero was involved in a motorcycle accident in 2001 that caused a cerebral hemorrhage, and because most jurisdictions refuse to license a fighter who has sustained a brain injury, he was unable to fight in the United States. The boxer wound up fighting mainly in Japan and Latin America, where he won his first title in 2006.<br /><br />Valero also was charged with drunken driving in Texas, which is the primary reason he was denied a U.S. visa.<br /><br />He accused the U.S. government of discrimination, saying his application wasn&#x27;t approved because of his sympathy for Chavez, a fierce critic of the U.S. government.<br /><br />He appeared at times as a special guest at televised events hosted by Chavez and was lionized by Chavez supporters as a national hero, while some critics accused him of avoiding punishment for past problems due to close links to the government.<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="/blogentry/39936">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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