Dad taped saying 'We're going to do it' in alleged murder for hire plot

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Travis Caguana, 21, is awaiting trial on murder charges. His father, Euripides, allegedly tried to help him beat the case by hiring a hit man to kill a prosecution witness | (Cook County Sheriff)

Jurors listened closely as federal prosecutors on Thursday played secret audio recordings of a Chicago man who allegedly tried to hire a hit man to kill two teens who were about to testify against his son in a murder trial.

“We’re gonna do it. We’re gonna do it,” Euripides “Caca” Caguana, 59, told Jimmy Valentine on the recording.

“I’ve got a dude on standby,” replied Valentine, on the other end of the line.

What Caguana didn’t know was that “the dude” Valentine was talking about was an undercover police officer. And after he met the would-be hit man, he was arrested in October of 2013 and charged with four counts of murder-for-hire.

Valentine, who did plumbing work for Caguana and was briefly his neighbor in Ashburn on the Southwest Side, testified on Thursday that he called police after Caguana shared the plan to kill the two teens.

Caguana gave him $500 to buy a gun and offered $7,000 more when the job was done, Valentine said. He also promised to buy Valentine’s son a Cadillac Escalade, Valentine added.

During a meeting at a restaurant near Addison and Pulaski in October 2013, Caguana said that he’d been studying the two teens’ movements and even produced maps and photos from the trunk of his car, Valentine said.

One of the intended targets lived directly next door to Caguana in the 3700 block of West 81st Place.

Jurors this week will hear several audio recordings as well as testimony from law enforcement officers.

But Caguana’s defense attorney, Gerardo Gutierrez, told jurors during opening statements on Wednesday that his client was entrapped.

Valentine was a regular informant for the Chicago Police Department, Guttierez said.

Valentine testified Thursday that he regularly called a Chicago Police detective with tips about drugs and guns, and that he saw the detective as a father figure.

Gerardo said that when Caguana called Valentine at the lowest point in his life, with his son’s life hanging in the balance, and spoke in extremes about the situation at hand, that Valentine opened the door for him to act, in essence saying “You need to act on that. I got a guy.”

“The law does not permit police informants to trap someone,” Gutierrez said.

Caguana’s son, 21-year-old Travis Caguana, is locked up at Cook County Jail, awaiting trial on murder and weapons charges in the 2011 death of a 19-year-old man.

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