Death of a Pran: Suicide Marks Venezuela Former Prison Boss’ Decline

Death of a Pran: Suicide Marks Venezuela Former Prison Boss’ Decline

Photo: Cortesía La Verdad

 

Weeks after reports emerged of the suicide of a notorious Venezuelan prison gang boss in Colombia, authorities have finally confirmed the death of Edwin Ramón Soto Nava – a death that has echoed through Venezuela’s underworld.

By Insight Crime

Sep 24, 2021

According to a Caracol News investigation, Soto Nava, alias “Mocho Edwin,” killed himself last month. He was living under an assumed name in Bogotá after having illegally procured a Colombian identification card.





Soto Nava’s suicide was first reported on August 29 by Venezuela news outlet La Verdad del Zulia after friends and family began to circulate WhatsApp messages about his death. According to the report, Soto Nava jumped from the sixth floor of the building where he lived in the Colombian capital. Police had surrounded the building after responding to neighbors’ calls about a disturbance in his apartment.

According to the news outlet, Soto Nava, apparently under the influence of alcohol and drugs, had been in a heated argument with his girlfriend when he fired shots through a window.

News outlets in Venezuela quickly picked up the report about Soto Nava’s death. Still, while a video circulated on social media of the scene at the apartment building, Colombian and Venezuelan authorities did not confirm the suicide for weeks.

Soto Nava had reportedly been living in Colombia since 2018, hiding from authorities and his enemies.

InSight Crime Analysis

Once one of Venezuela’s most powerful pranes, or prison gang bosses, Soto Nava had seen his power erode during a long absence from his stronghold of western Zulia state.

From 2009 to 2013, Soto Nava and a nucleus of his men ruled Zulia’s Sabaneta prison, which BBC Mundo previously described as the country’s most dangerous. There, he formed the Tren del Norte gang, extending its influence to Zulia’s capital Maracaibo, particularly the city’s northern zone. There, gang members extorted merchants, committed piracy on Lake Maracaibo, and participated in kidnappings and street-level drug sales.

With the closure of Sabaneta prison in 2013, Soto Nava was transferred to Tocorón prison, where he came to know the leader of Tren de Aragua, now Venezuela’s most powerful gang. From Tocorón, he continued his command of Tren del Norte, but the gang weakened without his direct leadership.

Read More: Insight Crime – Death of a Pran: Suicide Marks Venezuela Former Prison Boss’ Decline

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