His prominence led Governor Luis Fortuño to order flags flown at half staff for three days when informed of the musician's death.
Governor Luis Fortuño declared three days of mourning island-wide accompanied by the lowering of the U.S. and Puerto Rico flags at all public buildings and facilities in memory of Morales Crespo.
Jorge Luis Borges | Luis Miguel | Luis Buñuel | C.D. Luis Ángel Firpo | Tomás Luis de Victoria | San Luis Potosí | San Luis | San Luis Obispo, California | Luis Ángel Firpo | Luis | San Luis, Argentina | José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero | Luis Muñoz Marín | Luís Figo | Luis Suárez | Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport | Luis Fortuño | Luis Brandoni | Juan Luis Guerra | San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí | San Luis Obispo | Luis Manzano | Luís de Camões | José Luis Chilavert | The Bridge of San Luis Rey | San Luis Obispo County | Luis Fonsi | Luis Enrique | Luis Alandy | São Luís, Maranhão |
Carlos M. García, born on June 25, 1971, is a Puerto Rican banker who served as president of the Puerto Rico Government Development Bank (GDB) from 2009 to 2011 during the administration of Governor Luis Fortuño.
On March 2012, an audio was leaked to YouTube in which Hernández is heard chastising municipal employees for their lack of support to activities of the campaign of the New Progressive Party and Luis Fortuño.
Attorney Luis Estrella-Martínez, born on November 17, 1971 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, has been nominated by Governor Luis Fortuño to become the youngest Associate Justice of the current Supreme Court of Puerto Rico.
As such, he represented, and spoke on behalf of the President-elect, at the inauguration of Governor of Puerto Rico Luis Fortuño, who although a Republican, heads a bipartisan administration that includes two notable Democrats, Resident Commissioner Pedro Pierluisi and Kenneth McClintock, who was appointed by Fortuño as Secretary of State, and first in the line of succession.
The position was created upon enactment of Law 222 of 2011 and the first, and so far, only Electoral Comptroller, Manuel A. Torres, was sworn in by Puerto Rico's Secretary of State Kenneth McClintock on March 8, 2012, after being nominated by Governor Luis Fortuño in January 2012 and confirmed by both houses of the Puerto Rico Legislative Assembly.
Senator Roberto Prats became the Popular Democratic Party's nomineee for Resident Commissioner for the upcoming elections, which he lost to Luis Fortuño, despite a big boost for his congressional campaign, when the Democratic National Committee (DNC) Chairman Terry McAuliffe endorsed him in March 2004.