Sergio Peña Clos
Sergio Peña Clos was a Puerto Rican politician and Senator. He was a member of the Senate of Puerto Rico from 1980 to 2004.
Early years and studies
Sergio Peña Clos was born on June 13, 1927, on Humacao, Puerto Rico, to Dr. Sergio Peña Almodóvar and Maria Clos Ribót. He finished the eighth grade at the Ponce de León public school in his hometown, and graduated from high school at the Colegio San José in Río Piedras at the age of fourteen. With only 15 years, Peña Clos enrolled at the University of St. Louis in Missouri, where he studied for three years. He then returned to Puerto Rico and in 1951, he finished his bachelor's degree in social science at the University of Puerto Rico. In 1955, he graduated as an attorney from the University of Puerto Rico School of Law.Professional career
At age 21, Peña Clos was a judicial adviser to judge Julio Suárez Garriga. At the age of 23, he opened his own law firm in Caguas and worked as a criminal lawyer.In 1960, while working at the Puerto Rico Bar Association, Peña Clos became interested in the case of Salvador Agron and Tony Hernández, two Puerto Rican gang members accused of murdering two innocent teenagers and sentenced to death row. Peña Clos appeared at the New York Court of Appeals as a friend of the court, analyzing the case. Peña Clos also met with Governor Nelson Rockefeller, and eventually Agrón's death sentence was eliminated, while Hernández' sentence was revoked.
In 1975, Peña Clos was named member and Vice President of the Civil Rights Commission of the Government of Puerto Rico. He remained in the commission until 1977.