Sandro Rosa do Nascimento

Sandro Rosa do Nascimento

Sandro Rosa do Nascimento (July 7, 1978 - June 12, 2000) was one of the most publicized criminals in Brazil. Nascimento boarded a public bus, intending to rob the passengers. However, the incident developed into a hostage situation, which was broadcast live by most Brazilian national television channels.

Early life

After the crime Brazilian psychologists discussed a number of facts that could have led to Nascimento's behavior. Extreme poverty can, in some cases, lead people to take extreme measures. In Brazil, little attention is given to homeless children might have also triggered Nascimento to take such drastic action. Events of his childhood have been examined for their influence on Nascimento's choices.

Sandro do Nascimento's biological father abandoned his mother upon learning that she was pregnant. When he was six years old, Nascimento witnessed the murder of his mother by thieves. Nascimento then became a "street kid" around Rio de Janeiro, under the nickname "Mancha". He became a drug addict, stealing to sustain a cocaine habit, and using other drugs, including glue. He also never learned to read or write, rotating between the streets and Brazil's horrific juvenile and adult jails.

Sandro do Nascimento frequented the Catholic Candelaria church in Rio de Janeiro. He would sleep and eat there, and made friends with other homeless children. On July 23, 1993, Nascimento witnessed the infamous Candelaria church massacre. Some Brazilian policemen killed eight of Nascimento's friends or acquaintances, and several others were injured. Nascimento himself was physically unharmed, but several times during the hostage incident, he mentioned that he had been at Candelaria, suggesting that he was psychologically affected by the event.

Hostage Situation

On June 12 2000, Nascimento, a homeless man, went aboard a public bus (Ônibus #174) in Jardim Botânico, Rio de Janeiro. He was armed with a .38 caliber revolver, intending to rob the passengers. Moments after he announced the robbery, a passenger signaled to a vehicle from the Brazilian military police, prompting the police to intercept the bus.

Hostages

Having nowhere to run, Nascimento took ten hostages. The bus was soon surrounded by police officers and television news cameras. Nascimento at first assured the passengers, the police, the television crews and their viewers that he did not intend to kill anyone. However, as the hours passed, he grew agitated and started to threaten the hostages' lives. During negotiations with the police, Nascimento demanded weapons and a new driver to drive the bus (since the original driver had escaped through a window). He threatened to start killing the hostages if the authorities did not comply with his demands.

Nascimento singled out several of the hostages for dramatic demonstrations over the course of the event. He repeatedly used one of the hostages as a human shield, holding his gun to their head and taking them to the back of the bus, he told them to scream and cry to dramatize the situation since he had no intent on killing them, where he shouted to the police, media and the crowd of onlookers through a rear window, parading the hostage's apparent, imminent death. Claiming that he was possessed by the devil, he staged the death of one of the hostages - Janaína Lopes Neves - by forcing her to lie on the floor of the bus and, after telling her to hold still, shooting between her legs. This made it appear to those outside and viewing on television that he had killed her.

Exits Bus

At 06:50 PM local time, Nascimento decided to exit the bus, using schoolteacher Geisa Firmo Gonçalves as a human shield. As Nascimento's attention was being held in one direction, an officer from the special ops team, armed with a submachine gun, approached from another direction in an attempt to neutralize the gunman. Just prior to the officer reaching Nascimento, the gunman turned directly toward the previously unnoticed officer who was then almost on top of him, the officer's gun trained directly on his head. A surprised Nascimento reacted by flinching backward away from the officer and starting to fall to the ground, taking Gonçalves down to the ground with him. The officer reacted by continuing his advance and firing two or three shots at Nascimento while doing so. None of these shots struck Nascimento. Officers then converged on Nascimento and Gonçalves as they lay on the ground. The gunman was immobilized by the police and taken into custody while Gonçalves, who had been shot by the officer, was taken to a hospital. Moments later, both the hostage and Nascimento were dead.

Nascimento could be seen to be alive at the time he was placed into a police vehicle. Some time after being taken into custody, he died of asphyxiation. There were later assertions that Nascimento was intentionally killed by the police, and that his death was a matter of revenge for the public nature of the hostage event. The officers who took him into custody were charged with murder; after jury trial they were found not-guilty.

Gonçalves was shot four times. An investigation concluded she had been shot once in the face by the advancing police officer and then three times in the back by Nascimento in the ensuing struggle. The officer's shot was clearly accidental; it is unknown what Nascimento's intentions were when he fired, and whether any or all of his shots were intentional.

The bus route

The number "174" was used to identify a specific bus route between Central do Brasil and Gávea. Due to the stigma caused by this incident, the route was rebadged as "158" in November 2001.

Documentary

The documentary "Bus 174" is about this incident, discussing how Nascimento took the bus' passengers and the driver as his hostages, and how the Brazilian police managed the situation.

ee also

*List of hostage crises

External links

*http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/cotidiano/paniconorio.htm


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