This analysis explores the arrest of Armando Fernández Larios through the lens of irony rather than vengeance. Drawing on Greek mythology—specifically the figure of Actaeon—and on archival records from Chile’s Museum of Memory and Human Rights, the text examines how structures of power can turn back on those who once operated them. The piece reflects on repression, bureaucracy, and accountability, connecting dictatorship-era violence in Chile with contemporary debates about state power and enforcement in the United States. It argues that history does not always deliver justice deliberately, but sometimes does so inadvertently, through the cold continuity of institutional machinery.