CÓRDOBA. Although this week, the federal justice system of Córdoba will release the complete list of the newly identified individuals found in an area of the former clandestine detention center, La Perla, the names of three couples have already been revealed. One of the women, Graciela Doldán, was a fellow activist and friend of Juan Schiaretti.
The former governor and current national deputy posted on his social media: "I want to express my heartfelt memory of Graciela Doldán, whose remains were identified in La Perla along with those of other missing comrades and friends."
He added that "it is deeply painful, but it also brings truth and allows us to move forward in healing wounds that have remained open for half a century, especially for the families and loved ones who are still seeking answers."
Schiaretti also highlighted "the tireless work of human rights organizations, and the professionalism and commitment of the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team" (EAAF).
I want to express my heartfelt memory of Graciela Doldán, whose remains were identified in La Perla along with those of other missing comrades and friends.
It is deeply painful, but it also brings truth and allows us to move forward in healing wounds that…
— Juan Schiaretti (@JSchiaretti) May 10, 2026
Doldán was a labor lawyer and a member of Montoneros, and she was kidnapped in April 1976. Her brother, Roberto, celebrated the discovery: "La Gorda [a nickname] won again. No…
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CÓRDOBA. Although this week the federal justice system of Córdoba will release the complete list of the newly identified disappeared individuals found in an area of the former clandestine detention center La Perla, the names of three couples have already been revealed. One of the women, Graciela Doldán, was a fellow activist and friend of Juan Schiaretti. The former governor and current national deputy posted on his social media: "I want to express my heartfelt memory of Graciela Doldán, whose remains were identified in La Perla along with those of other comrades and friends who disappeared." He added that "it is deeply painful, but it also brings truth and allows us to move forward in healing wounds that have remained open for half a century, especially for the families and loved ones who are still seeking answers." Schiaretti also highlighted "the tireless work of human rights organizations, and the professionalism and commitment of the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team (EAAF)." Doldán was a labor lawyer and a member of Montoneros, and she was kidnapped in April 1976. Her brother, Roberto, celebrated the discovery: "La Gorda [a nickname] won again. They couldn't make her disappear. We have taken them out of the status of the disappeared, and we have finally found them." According to data from the Provincial Memory Archive, Doldán was born on August 19, 1941, in Santa Fe; she was kidnapped along with a colleague at her home in the city of Córdoba; she was 34 years old. Ester Felipe and Luis Mónaco, activists from Villa María, were also identified; their daughter is the journalist Paula Mónaco Felipe, who lives in Mexico. She wrote on her social media: "Today they are returning with us, and we are floating, with our hearts racing, discovering a new and wonderful way of happiness." Another couple identified is that of Carlos Cayetano Cruspeire and Rosa Cristina Godoy. He was at his job at a funeral home in downtown Córdoba on September 10, 1977, and she was in the same city shortly after. They were the parents of Mariela, who was left with some neighbors and raised by her relatives. Excavations at the clandestine detention center La Perla, in Córdoba. HANDOUT - Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team. In addition, the couple of José Luis Goyechea and Nilda Moreno were identified, kidnapped in Córdoba on August 15, 1977, in the General Paz neighborhood, in front of their three children, ages 5, 3, and 1. He was from La Rioja, studying Economics at the National University of Córdoba (UNC), and was an administrative employee at the College of Physicians. She was a psychopedagogue. In March, Carlos Alberto Dambra Villares, José Nicolas Brizuela, Raúl Oscar Ceballos Cantón, Alejandro Jorge Monjeau López, Ramiro Sergio Bustillo Rubio, Adriana and Cecilia Carranza Gamberale were identified based on the same remains found in Loma del Torito, in the La Perla area. Also, Oscar Omar Reyes, Eduardo Valverde, Sergio Julio Tissera Pizzi, Elza Mónica Coquelli Pardo, and Okelly Pardo. The excavation work was ordered by the judge of the federal court 3 of Córdoba, Hugo Vaca Narvaja. It was carried out within the framework of case number 35009693/1998, initiated 40 years ago by a complaint from Adolfo Pérez Esquivel, Nobel Peace Prize laureate, and family members of the disappeared. Córdoba, Human Rights.