Albán was taken into SEBIN custody after his arrest, and was said after his death to be a suspect for the
Caracas drone attack that had occurred two months earlier. He was seen by lawyer Joel García on Sunday after his arrest on Friday, but was reported dead on Monday, 8 October, 2018. The government states that he died by suicide when he jumped from a tenth-floor window either whilst he was waiting to be transferred (Interior Minister
Néstor Reverol's account) or whilst going to the bathroom (Saab's account) According to anonymous sources that Julio Borges says are official, Albán was dead before he was thrown out of a window. The narrative provided by the Maduro government was widely disputed. His family watched his funeral on video from their residence in New York. His devout Catholic faith is cited by friends, colleagues, and the conference of Catholic bishops of Venezuela as a reason to not believe the official story regarding his death, because he had too much respect for God to consider taking his own life.
Luisa Ortega Díaz – the exiled Venezuelan Attorney General – announced her understanding that Albán died of suffocation while being tortured by a bag over his head during interrogation. Spain took similar actions, questioning the Venezuelan ambassador in Madrid. Candlelight protests, public memorials and vigils were held in Caracas, particularly outside the SEBIN buildings, to denounce the murder.
Investigations The office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights called for an investigation into Albán's death, and planned to include it in a wider investigation into human rights abuses in the country. The opposition government in Venezuela asked that Colombia perform the investigation, so that it would be unbiased. García suggested that since Albán retained his Colombian citizenship after moving to Venezuela, Colombia could have more legal rights to pursue an investigation; the international ramifications of the event were heightened when Albán's place of birth and heritage (his parents and ancestors are all Colombian) were made public knowledge. In May 2021, Maduro's
Attorney General,
Tarek William Saab, admitted that Albán did not commit suicide, as initially reported by government officials, but was killed. Saab announced that two SEBIN officers had arrest warrants issued against them for
manslaughter and other related charges. In February 2022 a decision by the Court of Appeals of Caracas further reduced their sentence to two years and eight months.
Zair Mundaray, former prosecutor of the Venezuelan Public Ministry, denounced that the officers "were always in the offices of the SEBIN in El Helicoide" and they never "set foot in a jail". Albán's family lawyer declared that the officers were only imprisoned for a few days and that they were charged for a crime of negligence, but never convicted for an intentional homicide, as if an accident had occurred. ==See also==