Guerrero signed for a new club in his homeland in February. Weeks later, he wanted the contract ripped up after threats to his family
is on national television pleading for his family’s safety. It is February 16 this year and he is asking Richard Acuña, president of the Peruvian club Cesar Vallejo, to release him from a contract that he had signed weeks beforehand. Guerrero says his mother, Petroñila Gonzales, is being harassed by local criminals. He adds that Katia Montenegro Dietschi, the mother of his only daughter, Naela Guerrero, who also lives in Peru, has also been sent threatening messages.
They also called on Charles Stanish, an American archaeologist, who explained the coca leaf’s cultural popularity in Peru. The most remarkable evidence he used involved frozen corpses of Inca children found at the top of Llullaillaco, a volcano on the border between Argentina and Chile, 18 years earlier. In 2013, forensic analysis of the mummies’ hair revealed traces of benzoylecgonine, the same substance as in Guerrero’s urine sample.