- Cesar Suarez was gunned down while driving through the port city of Guayaquil
- He had been tasked with investigating the terrifying live TV hijack on January 9
A leading Ecuadorian prosecutor who was investigating an armed attack on a TV station earlier this month has been shot dead.
Cesar Suarez was gunned down in a professional hit as he drove through the port city of Guayaquil this afternoon.
He was shot in the head after leaving his office to attend a court hearing.
Suarez worked in a specialist investigative unit set up to combat transnational organised crime.
He had been involved in several high-profile criminal probes and had recently been tasked with investigating the terrifying live TV hijack police brought to an end on January 9.

Cesar Suarez (pictured) was gunned down in a professional hit as he drove through the port city of Guayaquil this afternoon

He was shot in the head after leaving his office to attend a court hearing. The bullet holes can be seen here in the window of his car

Members of the National Police remain in the place where Prosecutor Cesar Suarez was shot dead in Guayaquil, Ecuador on January 17
Hooded gunmen burst into TC Television in Guayaquil and fired off shots while employees were broadcasting.
Ecuadorian journalist Jose Luis Calderon, who was live on air when the drama occurred, revealed after it was over that the intruders stuffed his jacket with an improvised explosive and threatened to kill him if police arrived.
The South American nation’s attorney general’s office later confirmed 13 people were arrested after heavily-armed police stormed the building and were set to be charged with terror offences.
Suarez had told an Ecuadorian newspaper in an interview a day before he was killed that he didn’t have police protection despite quizzing the 13 suspects to try to find out who had ordered the attack.
The country’s Attorney General Diana Salazar said after learning of the state prosecutor’s murder: ‘I am going to be emphatic.
‘The groups of organised crime, the criminals, the terrorists, will not stop our compromise with Ecuadorian society.’
The attack on TC Television was one of the first major criminal acts Ecuador suffered after the January 7 prison escape of gang boss Adolfo Macias, alias Fito and president Daniel Noboa’s subsequent decision to impose a state of emergency.

Relatives of Prosecutor Cesar Suarez cry at the place where Suarez’s was shot dead

Members of the National Police move the body of Prosecutor Cesar Suarez in Guayaquil

Members of the National Police inspect the car in which Prosecutor Cesar Suarez was at the moment he was shot dead

Men with their faces covered entered the set of the TC Television network in the port city of Guayaquil on January 9 and shouted that they had bombs

Armed men broke into the set of a public television channel in Ecuador as it broadcast live and threatened people

Men were seen brandishing what appeared to be bombs and grenades (pictured)
The fugitive, leader of a gang called Los Choneros, remains at large.
The TV studio raid has been blamed on another gang called Los Tiguerones which has been linked to the kidnap of British millionaire businessman Colin Armstrong last month.
The 78-year-old former honorary consul for Guayaquil was released on December 20 after several days in custody and nine suspects subsequently arrested.
Suarez was killed as he drove along an avenue called Avenida del Bomberos.
Pictures published in local media showed the window on the driver’s side of his car had been left riddled with bullets.
The huge upsurge in violence in Ecuador in recent years has been blamed on its increasing importance as the outlet route for cocaine produced mainly in Peru and Colombia.
Domestic drug gangs in Ecuador have allied with bloodthirsty Mexican cartels.