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Ramfis Trujillo
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Rafael Leónidas Trujillo Martínez (5 June 1929 – 27 December 1969), better known as Ramfis Trujillo, was the son of , dictator of the Dominican Republic, after whose 1961 assassination he briefly held power. Nominally an army general, he lived a playboy lifestyle similar to his friend and brother-in-law Porfirio Rubirosa. Remembered for his repression of political opponents, he went into exile in Spain, where he succumbed to his injuries 10 days after crashing a sports car.


Early life
Ramfis was born in 1929, his mother was María de los Angeles Martínez Alba, nicknamed La Españolita "the little Spaniard" as her parents were from Spain. By the age 14, his father had made him a , with equivalent pay and privileges. Some say he received this appointment aged just four and that he had become a brigadier general by the age of nine.
(2025). 9781594489587, Riverhead Books, New York (2007).
He was nicknamed Ramfis after the high priest in 's opera .
(2025). 9781101186862, Penguin Publishing Group. .

In the early 1950s, he married his first wife, Octavia Ricart, they had six children.

In the mid-1950s, he was sent to study at the United States Army Command and General Staff College in , . While there, and with Rubirosa as his liaison, Trujillo skipped class and took off for Hollywood, eventually embarking on an affair with actress . Trujillo became notorious for buying luxury cars, coats, and jewelry for beautiful girls during his stay. Trujillo's flashy gift-giving made the national news and members of the United States Congress were openly questioned by the press about what real use was being made of foreign aid given to the Dominican Republic. At one point a bumper sticker began appearing on the cars of girls in Los Angeles that read: "This Car Is Not A Gift From Trujillo".

(2005). 9780007171071, HarperCollins Publishers.

Since his attendance at the military school was erratic at best, he was denied his diploma after completion. This fact greatly infuriated, and at the same time, humiliated his father.

When he returned home, his wife Octavia filed for divorce. His behavior forced his father to send him to a in Belgium. Dominican historian has documented Trujillo's history of mental hospital stays, and Robert Crassweller also wrote about it in his Trujillo's biography. Trujillo received electroshock treatments in Belgium as early as 1958; there were also stays in mental hospitals after that.

Not long after all this, he moved to Paris to resume his socialite lifestyle. Many of these actions have most historians convinced that Trujillo never wanted to be a ruler like his father and that he just wanted to live the carefree and bon vivant life of a playboy, shunning any sort of responsibility. (née Iris Lia Menshell) became his second official wife during these years. She was an American of immigrant parents, who had a short but relatively successful film career in Hollywood, most notably in The Left Handed Gun, opposite . They had two children.


Influential years
On 30 May 1961, Rafael Trujillo was assassinated in a plot to end his 31-year rule. Ramfis quickly returned to the country and, with the help of Johnny Abbes García, the ruthless intelligence chief, brutally repressed any elements believed to be connected with his father's death, murdering many of the suspects himself.

Afterward, he and Joaquín Balaguer took some steps to open up the regime. Ramfis eased his father's harsh censorship of the press, and also granted some civil liberties. However, these concessions were rejected as insufficient by a people whose only memories had been the Trujillo era, rather than the decades of poverty and instability which had preceded it ( in 1902–1905, in 1911—12 & 1914, U.S. occupation in 1916–1924).Dominican Republic At the same time, even these meager reforms were opposed by the hardline trujillistas gathered around Ramfis' uncles.

Both internal and external pressures forced him into exile late in 1961, when he fled back to France, along with all of the surviving Trujillos, aboard the famed yacht Angelita (still sailing today as the cruise ship Sea Cloud), with his father's casket, which was allegedly lined with $4 million (equivalent to $ million in ) in cash, jewels and important papers.

In 1962, he settled down in Spain where he was protected by Generalisimo . There he continued with his lifestyle, which included flying planes as a hobby.

He died on 27 December 1969 in a Spanish hospital due to complications from after being severely injured in a car crash ten days earlier in the outskirts of . The person in the car he hit, Teresa Bertrán de Lis, the Duchess-consort of Alburquerque, died instantly. Trujillo was initially buried in Madrid's Almudena cemetery, but his remains were subsequently moved to Mingorrubio Cemetery in to accompany his father's remains. Trujillo was driving a Ferrari 330GT sports car (s/n 9151), a blue 2-door purchased in 1966. The car sat unrestored in Spain from 1969 and finally was offered for sale in early 2013 for 50,000.

Ramfis Trujillo's children and grandchildren are still alive, some of them living in Spain.


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