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He was the suspect in brutal Florida Keys murder. Now he's in Alligator Alcatraz
The Keys community was still recovering from Hurricane Irma when the firefighters made the grisly discovery around 9:40 p.m. Oct. 21, 2017.
And many of the people looking for work cleaning people's yards from the damage caused by the Category 4 storm lived on boats in a mooring field behind the Murray Nelson Government Center on the bayside of U.S. 1, right across the street from the VFW where the victim, Mary Bonneville, went to drink and play video poker just about every night.
READ MORE: Detectives arrest suspect in post-Irma Florida Keys murder
That's also where the man — who prosecutors charged with Bonneville's murder two years later — lived. Investigators said 59-year-old Eddy Lopez-Jemot stabbed Bonneville that night and then set her house at the 700 block of Ponce de Leon Boulevard ablaze.
But he's not in prison; instead, he landed in Alligator Alcatraz, the tent city the state of Florida built this summer on an airstrip in the middle of the Everglades to temporarily hold migrants before they're to be deported.
Lopez-Jemot pleaded no contest to first-degree arson June 30 and was sentenced to nearly four years in prison, but given time served for that entire time since he's been in Monroe County jail ever since the week Bonneville was found dead. In exchange for his plea, the state dropped the murder charge.
Star witness became uncooperative
Chief Assistant State Attorney Joseph Mansfield told the Herald this week that the second-degree murder case was getting increasingly difficult because one of prosecutors' star witnesses became uncooperative and the other disappeared.
Monroe sheriff's homicide detectives tied Lopez-Jemot to the murder through DNA they found on a beer can and on a towel found outside of Bonneville's house. Since he had done work at the house in the past, it was reasonable that his DNA could be on the towel without him having committed the murder, Mansfield explained.
'Proving homicide was becoming more and more problematic,' he said.
Monroe Circuit Judge James Morgan III also sentenced Lopez-Jemot to two years of probation, and as part of the plea deal, he had to promise to stay out of Monroe County, according to court records. Mansfield said that after his June 30 conviction, Monroe authorities notified federal immigration officials that Lopez-Jemot was in the U.S. illegally from Cuba.
READ MORE: Is your family member or client at Alligator Alcatraz? We obtained a list
It's not clear when he arrived at Alligator Alcatraz, but his name turns up in the list the Miami Herald obtained of the more than 700 people being held at the detention facility, which opened July 1.
His court-appointed attorney, Philip Massa, declined to comment on the case.
Person of interest from the start?
Keys detectives focused on Lopez-Jemot from nearly the beginning. That's because about 20 minutes before firefighters arrived at Bonneville's burning house, Lopez-Jemot threatened to cut off his then-girlfriend's head and burn her house down. The confrontation occurred in the VFW's parking lot, located just 660 feet west of Bonneville's home, investigators said.
And as he tried to force his way inside the woman's van, armed with a knife, he bragged that he had killed people in a similar manor several times in the past — stabbing them and burning their homes down — according to the sheriff's office.
Detectives arrested Lopez-Jemot two days later on charges of felony assault with a deadly weapon and burglary. He ended up pleading no contest in January 2018 to aggravated assault. A judge sentenced him to a year in county jail, with credit for time served, plus three years probation.
It would be nearly three years after Bonneville's death before Monroe detectives arrested Lopez-Jemot in connection with the murder. But a raid on his boat behind the Murray Nelson government center a month after she died gave early indication investigators had their eyes on him from the start.
The victim in the aggravated assault case, Magdalena Soutelo Rodriguez, 57, was one of the two witnesses prosecutors were relying on for a murder conviction against Lopez-Jemot, Mansfield said.
However, she has since become uncooperative after being arrested on felony cocaine possession in May 2024 and another felony arrest on two counts of possession of prescription drugs this May, according to Mansfield.
Soutelo Rodriguez has pleaded not guilty in both cases, which are pending in county court.
'She's being uncooperative, and she has recanted statements,' Mansfield said.

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Miami Herald
8 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Coast Guard loopholes could be linked to barge crash, maritime experts say
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When barges are used to transport equipment in construction work — and the tugboat pushing the barge is under 26 feet — they don't require a licensed captain, commricial maritime experts say. The barge in Monday's crash was transporting a crane and other construction materials; the large crane could have obstructed the tugboat operator's view from the pilot house. A review of photographs taken by Herald photojournalists and analysis by two AI tools estimate the tugboat is under 26 feet. The Coast Guard declined to confirm the tugboat's length when reached Friday afternoon. READ MORE: Two girls dead, two others critical after barge hits sailboat in Biscayne Bay: Coast Guard 'Companies try to take advantage of these rules,' said the retired tugboat and barge captain, who asked not to be identified due to the sensitive nature of the crash. 'The Coast Guard has to reevaluate [the regulations] to avoid a tragedy like this from happening again.' 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Commercial vessel operators, Ratzan said, must take precautions to guard the safety of recreational boaters, particularly children. 'It's outrageous that a commercial vessel pushed by a tugboat was operating in an area where children are sailing,' Ratzan said. 'This is basic negligence. At the end of the day, ...they had an obligation to the children.' Miami Herald staff writer David Goodhue and Miami Herald writer CD Goette-Luciak contributed to this report.

Miami Herald
21 hours ago
- Miami Herald
Miami Herald reporters discuss deadly sailboat crash with WLRN
Miami Herald reporters David Goodhue and Grethel Aguila appeared on WLRN's 'The South Florida Wrap Up' on Friday to discuss the Herald's reporting on the sailboat crash that killed two young girls and critically injured two others. The children were participating in a sailing summer camp when their boat was struck by a barge. WLRN's Tim Padgett spoke with Goodhue and Aguila about the latest developments in the investigation, including details about the tugboat captain who was operating the vessel pushing the barge, as well as the Miami Yacht Club, which organized the summer-camp program. To listen to the full interview visit


Axios
a day ago
- Axios
Trump's authoritarian streak
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