Case Details
NCOUC - Group 3
Missing or Unidentified Person
On January 1, 2008, at approximately 6:30 AM, an unidentified Hispanic male, known locally as "El Mariachi" or "Cowboy," was found dead in the 800 block of Pierce Street, Lynchburg, Virginia, from a single stab wound to the chest. The victim, estimated to be 28–30 years old, was a medium-built Hispanic male (approximately 5'8"–5'10", 160–180 lbs) with black hair, brown eyes, irregular scars on his extremities, abdomen, and hip, but no tattoos or surgical scars were found on his body. He wore blue jeans, a black snap-button shirt, a belt with a Western-style eagle buckle, two pairs of socks, and white leather cowboy boots with alligator designs. The homicide occurred during a New Year's Eve party at the residence of 29-year-old Adolfo Valentin-Morales, where a prior dispute escalated into a physical altercation on the porch involving the victim and three others. The victim allegedly brandished a knife, cutting one of the men, prompting Valentin-Morales to retrieve a kitchen knife and fatally stab the victim in the chest, severing his lung, pulmonary artery, and heart.
The victim, a recent arrival in Lynchburg, was a charismatic figure known for serenading locals with songs like "Feliz Navidad" at venues like Mario’s Pizza on Bedford Avenue, often compared to Vicente Fernández. Despite his local popularity, his identity remains unconfirmed due to multiple forged identification documents, with aliases including Aberzai Lopez-Arellano, Versai Lopez-Arellano, Pedro Cruz Lopez, and John Doe. Unverified leads suggested he was a Mexican national from Puebla, possibly linked to a family in the iron-ore drilling industry with a cousin in Washington state, but conflicting details stalled progress. A DNA kit sent to the Mexican Consulate in 2008 yielded no results. He's buried in Lynchburg’s Old City Cemetery potter’s field under a marker reading "Hispanic Male 2008".