• Who are the Riveras, the family implicated in the killing of St. Cloud

    From Daily Mexican@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 26 02:36:43 2022
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    A look through the Rivera family’s photos on social media
    suggests a tightly knit group with a love for get-togethers,
    community service and family outings.

    In a 2015 Facebook photo captioned, “New York fans stick
    together,” a young child poses with Angel Rivera, his
    grandfather, while both are wearing New York Yankees jerseys.
    The child’s mother, Nicole Montalvo, commented, “That’s my baby
    boy!”

    Now, the 8-year-old boy is motherless. Angel Rivera and his son
    Christopher Otero-Rivera —Montalvo’s estranged husband — have
    been arrested on murder charges. Wanda Rivera, the family
    matriarch, is accused of tampering with evidence and lying to
    investigators. And Nicholas Rivera, the family’s youngest son,
    is considered a person of interest in Montalvo’s killing.

    Montalvo’s remains were found last month on the Riveras’ Hixon
    Avenue property in St. Cloud and a vacant lot on Henry J Avenue
    owned by Nicholas Rivera, who also faces eight unrelated counts
    of possessing child pornography.

    Osceola County Sheriff Russ Gibson called it “probably the most
    gruesome murder scene" he’d seen in 32 years in law enforcement.

    Little information has been made public about the investigation.
    Affidavits filed to obtain arrest warrants have been sealed. But
    records reviewed by the Orlando Sentinel, many of which have not
    been previously reported, reveal a family with a history of
    domestic violence and heavy involvement in their local church.

    Cornerstone Family Church, run by pastor and St. Cloud Mayor
    Nathan Blackwell, told the Sentinel Angel Rivera was never a
    member of its staff and had not participated in its mission
    trips. But a 2013 video contradicts those claims. In it,
    Blackwell calls Angel Rivera the “spearhead” of a nine-year
    partnership with a church in Ecuador and they discuss several
    mission trips in detail.

    Most of the records involve Angel Rivera, 63, who has been
    arrested for numerous crimes since the early 1990s, including
    domestic battery and child molestation, according to Florida
    Department of Law Enforcement records. He’s also been arrested
    multiple times, including in the Montalvo case, for possessing
    firearms and ammunition as a convicted felon.

    Otero-Rivera, 32, was repeatedly accused of abusing Montalvo
    prior to her killing, including an October 2018 case in which he
    was accused of kidnapping and beating her. The couple were in
    the process of divorcing, and he was on probation and prohibited
    by court order from contacting her when she went missing late
    last month.

    Records also showed the family ran several nonprofit
    organizations out of a shed on their property, which they said
    they used to raise money for mission trips to South America and
    to establish a church chapter in St. Cloud.

    Neither of Otero-Rivera’s and Angel Rivera’s attorneys responded
    to a request for comment.

    Angel Rivera’s oldest son, 39-year-old Giulio Rivera, in an
    interview said he was driven from home by his father’s abuse. He
    described Montalvo as having provided a glimmer of hope for his
    family’s redemption, which makes coming to terms with her death
    at their hands even harder.
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    “As I grew apart from [Angel], I learned to forgive, to move on,
    to live my life and let go,” he said. “So to find out that this
    poor woman has been murdered, after meeting her and knowing that
    she’s a wonderful person — the disappointment came from anger
    and sadness because yet again, he just gets worse, and now my
    younger siblings are involved.”

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    A history of abuse

    Little has been publicly reported about Angel Rivera’s history
    of domestic violence, but court filings show he has been
    repeatedly accused of attacking members of his family.

    He was most recently accused of aggravated battery in March
    2017, when records say he tried to stab Otero-Rivera in a
    dispute over electricity being routed to a trailer where Otero-
    Rivera lived with Montalvo and their son.

    According to an arrest affidavit, Angel Rivera told deputies he
    pulled the plug leading into the trailer after he was “tired of
    them not paying for anything around the house.” During the
    argument, Angel Rivera pressed a butter knife against Otero-
    Rivera’s belly, prompting Otero-Rivera to call authorities.

    A judge signed an order, which was later lifted, prohibiting
    Angel Rivera from having contact with his son. The criminal
    charges were eventually dropped.

    Deputies at the time said there was “no prior history of
    domestic violence” between Angel Rivera and his son.

    Angel Rivera has repeatedly been accused of violence against his
    other children. In 2003, he was arrested for punching his oldest
    son, Giulio Rivera, in the mouth after the two got into an
    argument while Giulio Rivera was trying to pick up his paycheck
    for working at his father’s automotive repair business, Expert’s
    Auto Tech.

    An affidavit by the St. Cloud Police Department said Angel and
    Wanda Rivera gave different accounts of what happened, but
    agreed that Angel Rivera “may have hit” his son accidentally
    while they were struggling. Police also noted “five separate,
    unsolicited comments” by Angel Rivera about Giulio Rivera being
    gay, each louder and angrier than the last.

    “If he weren’t off with that other gay boy, he wouldn’t need
    more money,” Angel Rivera said of his son, according to the
    affidavit.

    In an interview with the Sentinel, Giulio Rivera said he later
    dropped the charges after he was told by Wanda Rivera, his
    stepmother, to do so, which he said was what typically happened
    after Angel Rivera was accused of attacking someone.
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    He also said court records don’t thoroughly detail the extensive
    history of abuse he experienced while living with Angel and
    Wanda Rivera and half-siblings. On multiple occasions, his
    father threatened him as a way to keep him quiet or complacent,
    Giulio Rivera said.
    Prior molestation allegation

    But the allegations of abuse extend beyond physical violence.
    According to a 2006 affidavit, Angel Rivera was arrested after a
    foster child accused him of molesting her and taking lewd
    photographs using a Polaroid camera.

    The victim — whose name and age were redacted, along with the
    names of witnesses and relatives — was redacted, said Angel
    Rivera would repeatedly take her to his auto shop between March
    and May 2005 and ask her to take off her clothes so he could
    touch her breasts. The victim told authorities the two didn’t
    have intercourse.

    She didn’t report the incidents to the Department of Children
    and Families until about a year later because she said Angel
    Rivera threatened to “kill her and her family if she told
    anyone," police said.

    The victim’s mother told police she placed the child under the
    Riveras’ care during an undisclosed Department of Children and
    Families investigation because Angel Rivera was a mechanic she
    trusted and "a good man due to him being a church member,”
    according to the affidavit.

    The charges were also dropped in that case, though a permanent
    injunction prohibiting contact with the girl was issued against
    him. In 2007, he was accused and later acquitted of violating
    the order.

    There are no court records indicating other instances of sexual
    abuse, but an Osceola County Sheriff’s Office calls-for-service
    log lists two calls — one in 1997 and another in 2001 — in
    reference to sexual battery, in which Angel Rivera was labeled
    the suspect.

    Giulio Rivera became estranged from the family, only
    occasionally getting in touch with them in an effort to
    reconcile. In summer 2016, he said he met Montalvo and her son
    for the first time and felt the family’s dynamic was changing
    for the better. But he lost touch with them again after that.
    News of his relatives being arrested in connection to Montalvo’s
    murder didn’t reach him until a cousin sent him links to online
    news stories about the case.

    He described Montalvo as kind and fun-loving and his nephew as a
    happy baby.

    “I want him to know that he has an uncle ... that loves and
    adores him, and remembers him from when he was a baby wearing
    Pampers,” Giulio Rivera said. “He was always this goofy little
    kid."


    Church activities

    Even as Angel Rivera’s rap sheet was growing, he became involved
    in Cornerstone Family Church in St. Cloud, posting online about
    his role in church ministries and mission trips to Ecuador to
    deliver food and medicine and help build parishes.

    Social media photos seem to show highlights of these trips:
    beaming congregants, Ecuadorian children posing with toys, and,
    in one photo, Angel Rivera administering what appears to be a
    vaccine to a woman.

    In photos posted on Jan. 27, 2013, Angel Rivera talked about his
    love for helping those in need and asked friends to donate to
    future trips.

    “We treated over 800 people for medical problems. We also
    delivered food to almost 1,000 families. And the clothes we took
    for the kids was like a dream come true for them," he wrote.

    Business records show he and Wanda Rivera took positions in two
    nonprofits — Global Mission Outreach and Union Baptist of Latin
    America — with the stated goal of raising money and supplies for
    communities locally and overseas. A third organization, Iglesia
    Bautista Israel, was created in 2016 as part of an expansion of
    a church in Ecuador but was inactive as of 2017.

    Union Baptist of Latin America and Iglesia Bautista Israel both
    name among their officers Guayaquil-based Pastor Parrish Jácome
    and his wife, Toyi Jácome, but it’s unclear the extent of their
    relationship with the Rivera family and the effectiveness of the
    organizations.

    Iglesia Bautista Israel spokesman Julio Santoro declined to make
    Jácome available for an interview. But a Nov. 8 filing on behalf
    of Union of Latin American Baptists removed Angel and Wanda
    Rivera as vice president and treasurer, respectively, and
    changed its address from a construction shed on the Riveras’
    Hixon Avenue property to a post office box in Palm Beach County.

    Stateside, the Riveras were heavily involved at Cornerstone,
    despite its patriarch’s occasional run-ins with the law. Two
    former congregants of Cornerstone, including Giulio Rivera, said
    Angel Rivera and Wanda Rivera held positions at the church,
    including leading children’s programs.

    Rivera called himself a missionary affiliated with the church
    when he wrote a letter to a judge in 2007, asking to push back a
    court date regarding his arrest for violating the injunction
    issued following his child molestation case so he could take
    part in an 11-day mission trip out of the country.

    “I will also be attending a service in a new church that we just
    built,” he wrote.
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    In a statement, the church denied that Angel Rivera had ever
    worked for the church or gone on its mission trips, “contrary to
    his claim.” Blackwell, the church’s senior pastor and St. Cloud
    mayor, declined interview requests.

    “Over the last twelve years, Mr. Rivera has not participated in
    any mission trip sponsored by our church,” said the statement,
    which was sent by the church’s executive administrative
    assistant, Donna Phillips, in response to questions from the
    Sentinel. “He has never served on our staff, and he is not a
    missionary for Cornerstone.”



    After this story was published online, a tipster flagged a
    sermon posted to the church’s YouTube page in October 2013 which
    contradicts the church’s statement. In the video, Blackwell
    calls Angel Rivera to the lectern to talk about his mission
    trips to Ecuador. Rivera talks for nearly five minutes about
    building and maintaining a church in Guayaquil and delivering
    medicine, clothing and other supplies at a jail for women in the
    city.

    Blackwell says he personally visited that church shortly after
    it was built.

    “I pray for Angel and I pray for the team that will be going
    back later next year, and we just thank you for this opportunity
    to be a part of what you’re doing in a very small but very needy
    part of your world,” Blackwell said in a prayer, before calling
    Angel Rivera “brother” and embracing him.

    Cornerstone Family Church did not immediately respond to a
    follow-up request for comment.


    ‘It’s broken my heart’

    In its statement, the church said it would “continue to hope and
    pray that all the families and individuals who are grieving and
    hurting will find a way to heal.”

    “Our entire church community is shocked and deeply saddened by
    these tragic events,” the church said. “We are doing what
    churches do — seeking to provide comfort and support.”

    Though he wouldn’t grant an interview on the subject, Blackwell
    addressed the case in a videotaped sermon that was posted online
    Nov. 3 by Cornerstone.

    In it, Blackwell asked the congregation to participate in a
    “special word of prayer" for Montalvo’s family and others
    affected by her tragic death. In the prayer, Blackwell
    acknowledges that some people attending the service personally
    knew the Montalvo and Rivera families.
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    “Let’s just stop right now and pray for that family, and pray
    for all of the families that have been impacted on both sides of
    the issue,” he said. “I know that it’s broken my heart, as I’m
    sure it has impacted many of you who had personal relationships
    with these individuals.

    “God, may this not rip our community apart, certainly not rip
    our church apart,” he prayed.

    Far from from St. Cloud and his former church, Giulio Rivera
    offered up his own prayer for the sister-in-law he barely knew
    and the nephew whose life would never be the same.

    “If I can give my life so that she can live — right now, if God
    came down and said, ‘I will give you one wish,’ I’d be dead
    right here on the floor right now, so my little nephew doesn’t
    have to grow up with the pain I did, of never having a mother,"
    he said.

    creyes-rios@orlandosentinel.com; krice@orlandosentinel.com

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