Dámaso Rodríguez Martín


Dámaso Rodríguez Martín, better known as El Brujo or Maso, was a Spanish serial killer and rapist who, in 1991, was responsible for three murders in the Anaga mountain area in Tenerife, where he sought refuge after his escape from the Tenerife II Prison, where he was serving a sentence for a violation and one of his killings.
Following the murder of a German couple, "El Brujo" became the most wanted criminal by Spain's security forces. Due to the severity of his crimes and the media coverage surrounding them, Martín is regarded as the Canary Islands' most famous killer.

Biography

Birth and early years

Dámaso Rodríguez Martín was born on December 11, 1944, in the place known as Las Montañas, in the village of El Batán. His parents were Martín Rodríguez Silveria and Celestina Martín Perdomo, and he had four brothers.
His family was very poor, but despite this, his parents tried to give him a good education. However, Dámaso started to perform criminal acts at a very young age. When he was just 17, he was accused of theft and arrested, and after his release a year later in September 1963, he joined the Spanish Legion and was sent to Western Sahara. In 1966, he graduated from the Spanish Legion.
Subsequently, Dámaso went back to Tenerife, and in 1967 married Mercedes Martín Rodríguez and settled in a place known as El Peladero, in the village of Las Mercedes in San Cristóbal de La Laguna. In 1973, their first child would be born, and in 1975 - the second.

Murders and escape

He committed his first murder on November 11, 1981 when he killed a young man who was with his girlfriend in his Mazda, in the area of El Moquinal. Dámaso was a voyeur who liked to watch couples having sex. He then killed the young man and beat and sexually assaulted the girl in the car with the body. He then drove the body and the girl to "Llano de los Viejos", where he abandoned them.
Investigators from the National Police asked around the area about a violent individual, a "night stalker", who knew the mountains and also strolled about at night looking for couples. All information pointed to Dámaso. "El Brujo" was sentenced to 55 years in prison for murder, rape, theft of a firearm and unlawful possession of weapons. Dámaso escaped from prison on January 17, 1991 and fled to the mountains of Anaga.
On January 23rd, the body of German tourist Karl Flick was found on the forest road leading to El Solís. The next day, at 3:15 PM, in a remote area of the Roque de El Moquinal, the Civil Guard recovered the body of his wife, Marta Küpper, who had obvious signs of strangulation. Everybody seemed to indicate that they had pleaded for their lives, but Martín had no compassion. Speculations, sightnings, the fugitive's escape at the last moment, robberies in caves and in the houses of hunters or farmers fed the legend of "El Brujo".
These events overlapped the celebration of the Carnival of Santa Cruz de Tenerife of that year, mainly due to the fear that aroused among the people that the murderer would show up in a costume, and could easily escape.

Death

On February 19th, a family moved to a house in the area near El Solís, only to find their door was forced open. They alerted the police, who dispatched two Civil Guards from Tacoronte, fronted by a sergeant commander, whom detected Martín's presence in the home.
When the noncommissioned officer tried to enter, he was met with shotgun fire. The agent returned fire, shooting several times, but "El Brujo" had no intetions of surrendering. Instead, he opted to end his life, placing his hunting shotgun under his chin and with the fingers of one of his feet, firing. However, due to the length of the weapon, he survived. Subsequently, there was another exchange between the officer and Martín, whom successfully killed himself in the second encounter.

In popular culture