User:Carlitos Lobo

Carlos Lobo was born in Miami and fully active from (16 January 1984 - 27 June 2000) and was a Cayman Islands high school student, who, along with an accomplice, stormed the front lawn of the Cayman Islands' Governor's House on the night of 9 June 2000, armed with a pocket knife, killed the male guard and distracted the female guard who drew her rifle at Lobo, but was rushed and stabbed in the throat by the accomplice, who then infiltrated the house with Lobo and roused Governor Peter Smith out of bed, demanding that he open the bedroom cash safe.

The two felons made off with $200,000 after he opened the safe, but not before Lobo fatally stabbed the 58 year old robbery victim in the throat. Three lay dead at the residence.

The accomplice escaped with most of the cash, and Lobo was arrested 6 miles away at Silver Sands restaurant with $15,000 cash in his possession.

During the trial, he was held in the courthouse jail cells and was sentenced to death, by public hanging. He requested permission to honor his younger brother's birthday, which was granted under supervision. United States Attorneys disputed the sentence due to his age.

He initially plead not guilty but was found guilty after a positive ID match on security camera footage. Had he plead guilty, he would have received a 2016 release date, at 32 years old.

On midday 27 June 2000, Lobo, at sixteen years old, was marched out to the public behind the courthouse, to screams of "We Love You." from the crowd, and shot once in the back of the head and died before he hung from the gallows. His body was placed in the jail cell and Church Ministry Priests performed a local ritual on the corpse, the ritual was traditional since the 1930s.

By that afternoon, United States combat troops strafed the streets of the capital George Town with gunfire. Although this information was greedily expunged by the Jamaican and Caymanian Courts, it was the murkiest week in Cayman Islands history.

His classmates were given a tour of the courthouse jail cells during that September.

His accolyte disputes the death, citing that Lobo was among the victims of a deadly 1988 shooting in Miami during the 1980s drug war between Cuba and Colombia.