Pedro López: The Monster of the Andes' Reign of Terror
How a Colombian serial killer evaded justice across three countries before vanishing without a trace

How a Colombian serial killer evaded justice across three countries before vanishing without a trace

Pedro Alonso López was born on October 8, 1948, in Santa Isabel, Colombia. Decades later, he would become one of the world's most prolific and elusive serial killers, earning the dark nickname "Monster of the Andes" for the reign of terror he inflicted across three South American nations.
López's killing spree primarily unfolded during the mid-to-late 1970s and early 1980s, targeting some of society's most vulnerable members. His victims were predominantly pre-teen girls aged 8 to 13, selected deliberately from lower socioeconomic backgrounds and Indigenous communities who had little protection and whose disappearances often went unreported to authorities.
His methods were brutal and calculated. López would lure young girls to remote locations under false pretenses. Once isolated, he would rape, strangle, and mutilate his victims before discarding or burying their bodies. His systematic approach, combined with the vulnerable nature of his targets and the jurisdictional challenges across three countries, allowed him to operate largely unchecked for years.
Beginn der Mordserie
Pedro López beginnt seine systematische Jagd auf Mädchen in Kolumbien, Ecuador und Peru.
Verhaftung in Ecuador
López wird in Ecuador festgenommen, nachdem er versucht hat, ein Mädchen zu entführen.
Geständnis und Massengräber
López gesteht etwa 300 Morde und führt die Polizei zu Massengräbern mit 53-57 Leichen.
Verurteilung
López wird in Ecuador für mindestens 110 Morde zu 16 Jahren Haft verurteilt – der Höchststrafe des Landes.
Freilassung und Verschwinden
Nach Verbüßung seiner Strafe wird López freigelassen und verschwindet spurlos aus der behördlichen Überwachung.
The scale of López's crimes remains staggering. While he claimed to have murdered over 300 people across Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, authorities have been unable to verify all his confessions. However, the confirmed death toll is horrifying: 110 murders were officially attributed to him in Ecuador alone. When police searched a forest near Ambato, Ecuador, they recovered the remains of 53 girls—a grim testament to the efficiency and scope of his predation.
López's capture came on March 9, 1980, when he was apprehended in Ecuador by townspeople after he attempted to kidnap a vendor's daughter. What followed was a rare moment of accountability in a region where serial killers had often operated with impunity. In 1983, López was convicted of 110 murders in Ecuador and received a lengthy prison sentence.
Yet justice proved temporary. In 1998—just 15 years into his conviction—López was released from prison. The decision to free him remains controversial and poorly documented, adding another layer of mystery to an already enigmatic case. What happened next deepened the mystery further.
On September 22, 1999, López disappeared. Whether he fled, died, or simply vanished into obscurity remains unknown. Despite being one of history's most prolific serial killers, his current whereabouts have never been determined. He has not been definitively located or accounted for in the decades since his disappearance.
The case of Pedro López raises profound questions about international law enforcement cooperation, the treatment of vulnerable populations, and the gaps in criminal justice systems that allowed a predator to operate across borders with relative freedom. The exact number of his victims will likely never be known with certainty—only that the confirmed 110 murders in Ecuador represent some of the most heinous crimes in modern criminal history.
Today, the Monster of the Andes remains at large, a haunting reminder of one man's capacity for evil and the institutional failures that enabled it.
**Sources:** https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedro_L%C3%B3pez_(serial_killer) https://serialkillershop.com/blogs/true-crime/pedro-lopez https://allthatsinteresting.com/pedro-lopez https://www.serialkillercalendar.com/Pedro%20Alonso%20LOPEZ.php https://www.biography.com/crime/pedro-alonso-lopez