Arrested in Oviedo for a Multiple Crime in La Corredoria

Published on May 20, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The National Police have arrested a 32-year-old man in Oviedo as the alleged perpetrator of the deaths of two people in the La Corredoria neighborhood. The victims, a man and a woman, showed signs of violence. Investigations indicate that the suspect, who had a romantic relationship with the woman, allegedly attacked after an argument.

Night street of the La Corredoria neighborhood, two fallen bodies on the ground next to a doorway, a 32-year-old man struggling with an officer while another policeman handcuffs the suspect, tactical flashlights illuminating the scene, yellow police tape waving, patrol car with flashing blue and red lights, dark cinematic style, photorealistic, low-angle shot, dramatic shadows, details of uniforms and reflective badges, tense atmosphere of a night crime in a residential neighborhood

How mobile geolocation speeds up arrests 📱

In cases like this, forensic technology plays a key role. Investigators use cell tower analysis to track the suspect's location before and after the incident. Data from messaging apps and social networks is also extracted to establish the timeline of events. This process, which combines call metadata and GPS records, allows the police to reduce the margin of error and obtain arrest warrants in hours, not days.

The debate of the discussion: AI's fault or bad mood? 🤖

While agents were searching for the suspect, some on social media were already theorizing: could it have been the fault of an algorithm that recommended a heavy metal playlist? Jokes aside, it seems the detainee didn't need artificial intelligence to make bad decisions. His only technical failure was not turning on airplane mode before the crime, because his phone gave him away like a human GPS. Good thing technology doesn't fail, even though humans remain an unpatched bug.