Luis Garavito (born January 25, 1957, Génova, Colombia—died October 12, 2023, Valledupar, northern Colombia) was a Colombian serial killer who was convicted of murdering 189 boys in the 1990s. Many of Garavito’s victims lived in poor neighbourhoods apart from their families, who could not afford to support them, leading observers to speculate that their disappearances were ignored or overlooked.
Garavito, the eldest of seven children, was raised in western Colombia. He attended school for only a few years and endured a difficult childhood, suffering abuse by his father and several neighbours. During his killing spree in the 1990s, many Colombian boys, most between the ages of 8 and 16, were reported missing or found dead, their bodies brutally mutilated and bearing signs of sexual assault. In 1997 the discovery of a graveyard containing the bodies of 36 boys near the city of Pereira prompted a nationwide manhunt.
In 1999 Garavito, then a drifter with a long history of alcohol problems and psychiatric illness, was arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting a young boy. He eventually confessed to murdering 140 boys, and he was eventually given an 835-year prison sentence for the murder of 189 people. He had gained access to his victims, many of whom were the unattended children of street vendors, by using disguises. Most often posing as a monk or a priest (one of his many nicknames in the Colombian media was “El Cura”), he lured the boys with promises of money or a drink. Garavito traveled widely during his killing spree, committing murders in at least 11 of Colombia’s 32 departments; he also was suspected of murders in Ecuador.