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Longtime AP reporter Juan Carlos Llorca dies at 40

In this Oct. 25, 2010 photo, Juan Carlos Llorca smiles during a press conference in Guatemala City. Llorca, El Paso correspondent for The Associated Press and a veteran reporter in his native Guatemala, has died. He collapsed at his home in El Paso on Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, and was rushed to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to his sister, Maria Jimena Llorca. A cause of death was pending. He was 40. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)
Juan Carlos Llorca

EL PASO, Texas (AP) -- Juan Carlos Llorca, a veteran Associated Press journalist who covered immigration and the drug war along the U.S.-Mexico border, and whose reporting on illegal international adoptions helped prompt national reforms in Guatemala, has died at age 40.

In this Oct. 25, 2010 photo, Juan Carlos Llorca smiles during a press conference in Guatemala City. Llorca, El Paso correspondent for The Associated Press and a veteran reporter in his native Guatemala, has died. He collapsed at his home in El Paso on Monday, Nov. 24, 2014, and was rushed to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to his sister, Maria Jimena Llorca. A cause of death was pending. He was 40. (AP Photo/Moises Castillo)

Llorca collapsed at his home Monday in El Paso, Texas, and was rushed to a hospital, but he was pronounced dead, according to his sister, Maria Jimena Llorca. The cause of his death is pending.

“Juan Carlos was that rare mix of aggressive reporter and gentle soul,” said Maud Beelman, AP’s editor for Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma. “He never turned away from an assignment, no matter how difficult, and his enthusiasm for the job was infectious.”

Llorca spent years reporting on illegal international adoptions in Guatemala, becoming one of the first journalists to uncover a smuggling trade in which infants were placed for adoption with unsuspecting couples, mostly from the United States.

Authorities discovered evidence of fraud that was later revealed to include false paperwork, fake birth certificates, women coerced into giving up their children and even child theft. At least 25 cases resulted in criminal charges against doctors, lawyers, mothers and civil registrars.

Llorca’s reporting helped prompt Guatemala to suspend international adoptions and adopt reforms in 2008. He’d joined the AP three years earlier in Guatemala.

As a political writer for El Periodico de Guatemala, a well-respected daily newspaper in Guatemala City, Llorca was selected for a Scripps Howard Foundation journalism fellowship in Washington, D.C., in 2002.

Llorca became AP’s correspondent in El Paso, Texas, in 2011. In addition to covering Mexico’s drug war and the border town of Ciudad Juarez ? when violence there was at its worst ? Llorca honed his photography skills, becoming a journalist who was able to report, write and shoot photos for his stories.

He covered a variety of topics from his base in Texas, including the surge of Central Americans coming across the U.S. border last summer and the exposure of potentially hundreds of infants to tuberculosis at an El Paso hospital. He also frequently covered stories in neighboring New Mexico, including border and immigration stories.

Llorca’s colleagues spoke Tuesday of his kindness and quick wit, his eye for what would make a great picture and the bulldog mentality he brought to stories large and small.

“He was one of the great voices of his generation,” said Moises Castillo, a longtime AP photographer in Guatemala, who also worked with Llorca at El Periodico. “He was a talented journalist, a great writer and friend. He really made every day count.”

Llorca had two teenage sons who had recently joined him in El Paso to attend school.

A few days before he died, Llorca posted a message on Facebook.

“If I could wish for something ? anything at all ? it would be to have dreadlocks like Bob Marley,” wrote Llorca, who was balding. “With everything else you could ask for, I’m good.”

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