Former gang member who killed man over ‘perceived’ insult in Springfield granted parole from life sentence
A former gang member who killed a man in 1992 in Springfield over a “perceived” insult directed toward the assailant and his associates has been granted parole from a life term, records show.
The state Parole Board granted release to Hector Arriaga, 52, to a halfway house after four months in lower security, according to a ruling dated Sept. 23.
The ruling said Arriaga was convicted of first-degree murder in September 1993 for the slaying one year earlier of Arnaldo Esteras.
First-degree murder carries a sentence upon conviction of life without the possibility of parole. But Arriaga became parole-eligible after the state’s highest court last year struck down life terms without the possibility of parole for defendants aged 18 to 20 at the time of their crimes, the ruling said.
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Arriaga was 20 at the time of the murder.
The ruling said Arriaga fatally shot Esteras on Sept. 13, 1992, in retailiation “for (what was perceived as) Mr. Esteras’s insult to Mr. Arriaga’s STG,” using a law enforcement acronym for security threat group, or gang.
Earlier that afternoon, the ruling said, Esteras “purportedly told STG member Ismael Cintron to take off beads that were associated with his STG. Mr. Cintron reported this to STG leadership, who ordered that Mr. Esteras be murdered.”
The ruling said Cintron was provided a gun, while Arriaga was given a knife as both men were dispatched to commit the slaying. The pair encountered Esteras on Main Street, the ruling said, and Cintron balked at opening fire.
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“Mr. Cintron decided he could not shoot him, so Mr. Arriaga took the gun and shot Mr. Esteras three times from approximately four feet away,” the ruling said.
The board noted that Arriaga had renounced his gang affiliations in 2010 in prison.
“Mr. Arriaga has been sober during his incarceration,” the ruling said. “He has served as a program facilitator. He has been involved in Restorative Justice programs. … Mr. Arriaga learned to write in English during his incarceration. He has been employed as a janitor since 2019.″
He also “presented as empathetic and insightful during his [parole] hearing,” the ruling said, adding that two of his friends and his brother testified in support of parole, while Hampden County Assistant District Attorney Jennifer Fitzgerald testified against parole.
Once Arriaga’s released, the ruling said, he’ll have to abide by a number of conditions including submitting to electronic monitoring for six months, staying off drugs and booze, refrain from contacting Esteras’s family, and participate in mental health counseling.
He remained incarcerated Monday at MCI-Norfolk, a medium security prison, records show.
Travis Andersen can be reached at travis.andersen@globe.com.