• The vehicle former security advisor Gustavo Alfredo Landaverde was riding in Dec. 7, 2011 when he was gunned down by hitmen. Landaverde had publicly accused police of working with organized crime. Courtesy of El Heraldo

  • Former security ministry advisor Gustavo Alfredo Landaverde, who was an outspoken critic of police corruption. "These are criminal organizations inside and out," he told the Miami Herald two weeks before he was gunned down. Courtesy of El Heraldo

  • Celin Eduardo Pinoth Hernandez was the leader of the 18th Street Gang, one of Honduras' most notorious street gangs. He's shown here at his prison, armed and in a police uniform. Friends say he was regularly allowed out to commit crimes at the behest of prison authorities. He was killed Oct. 13, 2011 just moments after his release. Handout

  • Journalists in Tegucigalpa hold a coffin as they protest against the murder of colleagues on December 13, 2011. In the past two years, and under the government of Porfirio Lobo, 17 journalists have been killed in Honduras. ORLANDO SIERRA / AFP/Getty Images

  • Universidad Nacional Autónoma de Honduras chancellor Julieta Castellanos and her son, Rafael Alejandro Vargas. Vargas was murdered by police in Oct. 2011, sparking a national police crisis. Courtesy of El Heraldo

  • A candlelight vigil to mourn the loss of two university students killed by police. At the forefront is Julieta Castellanos, the university president whose son, Rafael Alejandro Vargas, was murdered. Courtesy of El Heraldo