Juicio al 'procés' - Referéndum en Cataluña — El conflicto catalán

Estado
Cerrado para nuevas respuestas
Una lesbiana tienen tantas razones para ser xenófoba / islamófoba como para no serlo. Una heterosexual, ídem.

Walters, como Tommy Robinson, Wilders, Santi Abascal, Fede y toda la extrema derecha europea islamófoba y anti-inmigración se miran en el espejo del Likud / supremacismo israelí. Manda eggs que vayan llamando fascistas a nadie. El odio lo tienen ellos. Y para tontos útiles quienes les votan para que Europa siga bombardeando y desestabilizando los países islámicos de la mano del Trompo reloaded.

Al tema. Cataluña y el derecho a decidir, que no las conspiraciones sobre el moro muza que quiere prohibir el chorizo.
.

Ya te lo expliqué, pareces ciega moralmente. No importa, te dejamos ir con ellos a vivir en su califato, a ver cuanto duras.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...-sanctuary-shelter-muslim-asian-a8225106.html

NewsUKCrime
Grooming gangs abused more than 700 women and girls around Newcastle after police appeared to punish victims
'Sexual exploitation is happening in towns and cities across the country,' serious case review warns

Click to follow
The Independent Online

operation-shelter-composite.jpg

A total of 17 men and one woman have been convicted of offences including rape, sexual abuse, supplying drugs and trafficking for sexual exploitation in a series of trials over the Newcastle case ( PA )
Grooming gangs abused more than 700 women and girls around Newcastle with “arrogant persistence” after police appeared to punish victims while letting the perpetrators walk free, a case review has found.

The report into the response by authorities to child sexual exploitation found that before a large-scale police operation was launched in 2014, officers’ actions were sending an “unhelpful” message to perpetrators.


It warned that abusers are still preying on girls across the UK, and called for urgent action from the Government.


Rotherham grooming gangs may have abused more than 1,500 victims


Investigators said the abuse could not be stopped without work to understand the profiles, motivations and cultural influences of perpetrators, after finding similarities with grooming in Rotherham, Rochdale and Oxford.


Officials found that although a crackdown on child exploitation was swiftly launched when victims came forward in 2014, the abuse had not been halted.






AD 00:10 / 00:30


Independent - Daily Highlights

Watch Full Screen
“Unlike some other areas, Newcastle agencies did not try and sweep this under the carpet but actively went looking for it and as a result a large number of perpetrators were arrested and prosecuted, and victims saved from further trauma,” said former barrister David Spicer, who led the review.

“Sadly, it is still happening in Newcastle and other cities, but this city is determined to tackle it.”

After examining evidence on the abuse of hundreds of girls in the North-east, investigators concluded that local authorities claiming there is no grooming in their area “are not looking hard enough”.


Operation Sanctuary: “We do not believe that what we have uncovered is unique to Newcastle”
Pat Ritchie, chief executive of Newcastle City Council, said the council would enact all recommendations from the report.

“Sexual exploitation is happening in towns and cities across the country but what we have learned can be used to help others,” she added.

“We know it is still going on in our city, but we are doing everything in our power to prevent it, disrupt it and deal with it, and support the victims for years to come.”



Newcastle grooming gang ‘did not target white girls because of race’
Northumbria Police had identified more than700 potential victims of grooming in the regionby August through Operation Sanctuary, but expected the number to rise.

Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Darren Best said society had undergone a “sea change” in the knowledge and understanding of grooming in recent years.

“We are far from complacent and recognise we still have work to do to ensure we consistently identify victims and carry out comprehensive investigations on their behalf,” he added.


“What cannot be clearer is that safeguarding the vulnerable is everybody’s business.”

Before 2014, police were responding to incidents on an ad hoc basis, with efforts by authorities trying to persuade victims to keep away from the abusers and change their behaviours.

The review found the approach led to “consideration of deterrent punishments of victims for being drunk and disorderly or for making false allegations when accounts were changed”.

“This sent an unhelpful message to perpetrators – they were unlikely to be prosecuted or prevented from continuing to abuse – encouraging an arrogant persistence,” it added.


UK news in pictures
“It also had a significant impact on victims who learnt that nothing would be done against perpetrators.”

A total of 17 men and one woman have been convicted of offences including rape, sexual abuse, supplying drugs and trafficking for sexual exploitation in a series of trials over the Newcastle case.

Of eight victims covered in the trials, six were white and two were of African heritage, while the perpetrators came from a diverse range of backgrounds including Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Indian, Iranian, Iraqi, Kurdish, Turkish, Albanian and Eastern European.



Newcastle grooming gang victim sleeps with knife by bed after rape
The court heard how teenagers and young women were picked up off the streets, then groomed and given alcohol and drugs before being coerced or forced into sex at so-called “sessions” in Newcastle’s West End.

Victims described being raped while they were asleep, unconscious or incapacitated after being forced to drink and take drugs.

“I wanted to leave but I was given drink,” one said. “I kept saying no and fighting them off. I was very tired and fell asleep. When I woke, I had been raped.”


Another added: “When I was out of it they could do anything they wanted to me.”

A judge concluded that the defendants “selected their victims not because of their race, but because they were young, impressionable, naive, and vulnerable”, including young girls and women with learning difficulties and mental health issues.

The review said victims in the wider North-east included a 12-year-old girl who fell pregnant and other teenagers who underwent abortions, as well as others left with devastating long-term trauma causing substance abuse, mental illness and relationship breakdowns.

Canning Street in Newcastle, where grooming gang member Yassar Hussain lived (Lizzie Dearden)
It warned that one girl had suggested boys were among the victims, and that the sexual exploitation of male victims is likely to be under-reported and hidden.


The review said that while perpetrators’ individual beliefs are not known, they “all appear to come from a non-white, predominantly Asian/British minority ethnic culture or background” – as in Rotherham, Rochdale and Oxfordshire, while a grooming gang in Bristol were from a Somali background.

The review found that “arrogant” perpetrators “show remarkable persistence over long periods in targeting and grooming victims, undeterred by involvement of the police and other agencies”.

Muslim community responds to Newcastle grooming gang


Mr Spicer said: “Tackling sexual exploitation must address the perpetrators – not only preventing their activities but understanding their motivation.”


He added that cultural beliefs and practices have a “significant impact” on abuse, affecting both how abusers treat victims and how able victims feel to report their abuse.

One member of the Newcastle gang, Badrul Hussain, once told a white female ticket inspector: “All white women are only good for one thing – for men like me to f*** and use like trash. That’s all women like you are worth.”

One of the two victims from an African background said her parents blamed her for being raped and believe in spirit possession, adding: “They were going to kick me out.”


Mr Spicer attempted to interview jailed grooming gang members in Newcastle but only one – an asylum seeker who plans to return home at the end of his sentence – agreed.

He admitted abusing girls, including a homeless victim, but “displayed no regret” and claimed the victims “knew what they were doing”, accusing the Government, police and a judge of paying witnesses in a conspiracy against him.

Asked about his views on the UK, the man said “you can get anything here... sex, drugs, alcohol” and spoke in a “derogatory way about lack of morals in British girls and did not go with Muslim girls because there are not many of them”.


Northumbria Police Chief Constable Steve Ashman and Pat Ritchie, chief executive of Newcastle City Council after the Operation Shelter trials in August (PA)
Muslim girls have been abused by grooming gangs in other parts of the country, with a 2013 report containing dozens of case studies.

The review found that before Operation Sanctuary started in 2014, perpetrators in Newcastle were not consistently investigated and disrupted as victims were unwilling to make complaints.

“However, once the true extent of the problem became apparent, the police, the Crown Prosecution Service, the city council and partners across the city put in place a range of measures to disrupt, arrest and imprison offenders while supporting victims regardless of whether they were able to give evidence in court or not,” Mr Spicer said.


“In Newcastle, decisions about taking action were not influenced by lack of concern or interest, misplaced fears about political correctness or fear of being seen as racist. Neither was there any evidence of ineffective leadership or inappropriate interference by senior officials or political leaders to prevent action being taken.”

After two victims who did not know each other reported being abused in early 2015, Operation Shelter was launched and led to the initial arrest of more than 30 men and exposure of abuse dating back to 2007.

A multi-agency response to sexual exploitation was set up to take new reports and continues to operate, directing victims to both law enforcement and specialist support and becoming a national blueprint.


A total of 15 national recommendations included a review of private hire vehicle licensing, issuing specific guidance on the grooming of vulnerable adults and improving cooperation between agencies including the NHS, social care and police.

Mr Spicer also called for the Government to look at whether new laws should be created to “address the behaviour and involvement” of grooming gang members and ensure victims are treated sensitively in court to encourage others to come forward.

“The learning from this review does not only apply to Newcastle,” the report concluded. “It is hoped that it will be used to influence and shape services in other areas of the country and inform the need for national reform.”


The Government has outlined £40m worth of packages to tackle child sexual exploitation, and child abuse specialists are conducting research into different forms of offending.

A spokesperson said: “These are abhorrent crimes that have had a devastating impact on the lives of the victims involved.

“We have done more than any other Government to tackle child sexual abuse. It has been declared a national threat and we are investing millions of pounds to enable officers to actively seek out and bring offenders to justice. We will now look carefully at the recommendations in the joint serious case review.”
 
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...-sanctuary-shelter-muslim-asian-a8225106.html

NewsUKCrime
Grooming gangs abused more than 700 women and girls around Newcastle after police appeared to punish victims
'Sexual exploitation is happening in towns and cities across the country,' serious case review warns

Click to follow
The Independent Online

operation-shelter-composite.jpg

A total of 17 men and one woman have been convicted of offences including rape, sexual abuse, supplying drugs and trafficking for sexual exploitation in a series of trials over the Newcastle case ( PA )
Grooming gangs abused more than 700 women and girls around Newcastle with “arrogant persistence” after police appeared to punish victims while letting the perpetrators walk free, a case review has found.

The report into the response by authorities to child sexual exploitation found that before a large-scale police operation was launched in 2014, officers’ actions were sending an “unhelpful” message to perpetrators.


It warned that abusers are still preying on girls across the UK, and called for urgent action from the Government.


Rotherham grooming gangs may have abused more than 1,500 victims


Investigators said the abuse could not be stopped without work to understand the profiles, motivations and cultural influences of perpetrators, after finding similarities with grooming in Rotherham, Rochdale and Oxford.


Officials found that although a crackdown on child exploitation was swiftly launched when victims came forward in 2014, the abuse had not been halted.






AD 00:10 / 00:30


Independent - Daily Highlights

Watch Full Screen
“Unlike some other areas, Newcastle agencies did not try and sweep this under the carpet but actively went looking for it and as a result a large number of perpetrators were arrested and prosecuted, and victims saved from further trauma,” said former barrister David Spicer, who led the review.

“Sadly, it is still happening in Newcastle and other cities, but this city is determined to tackle it.”

After examining evidence on the abuse of hundreds of girls in the North-east, investigators concluded that local authorities claiming there is no grooming in their area “are not looking hard enough”.


Operation Sanctuary: “We do not believe that what we have uncovered is unique to Newcastle”
Pat Ritchie, chief executive of Newcastle City Council, said the council would enact all recommendations from the report.

“Sexual exploitation is happening in towns and cities across the country but what we have learned can be used to help others,” she added.

“We know it is still going on in our city, but we are doing everything in our power to prevent it, disrupt it and deal with it, and support the victims for years to come.”



Newcastle grooming gang ‘did not target white girls because of race’
Northumbria Police had identified more than700 potential victims of grooming in the regionby August through Operation Sanctuary, but expected the number to rise.

Temporary Deputy Chief Constable Darren Best said society had undergone a “sea change” in the knowledge and understanding of grooming in recent years.

“We are far from complacent and recognise we still have work to do to ensure we consistently identify victims and carry out comprehensive investigations on their behalf,” he added.


“What cannot be clearer is that safeguarding the vulnerable is everybody’s business.”

Before 2014, police were responding to incidents on an ad hoc basis, with efforts by authorities trying to persuade victims to keep away from the abusers and change their behaviours.

The review found the approach led to “consideration of deterrent punishments of victims for being drunk and disorderly or for making false allegations when accounts were changed”.

“This sent an unhelpful message to perpetrators – they were unlikely to be prosecuted or prevented from continuing to abuse – encouraging an arrogant persistence,” it added.


UK news in pictures
“It also had a significant impact on victims who learnt that nothing would be done against perpetrators.”

A total of 17 men and one woman have been convicted of offences including rape, sexual abuse, supplying drugs and trafficking for sexual exploitation in a series of trials over the Newcastle case.

Of eight victims covered in the trials, six were white and two were of African heritage, while the perpetrators came from a diverse range of backgrounds including Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Indian, Iranian, Iraqi, Kurdish, Turkish, Albanian and Eastern European.



Newcastle grooming gang victim sleeps with knife by bed after rape
The court heard how teenagers and young women were picked up off the streets, then groomed and given alcohol and drugs before being coerced or forced into sex at so-called “sessions” in Newcastle’s West End.

Victims described being raped while they were asleep, unconscious or incapacitated after being forced to drink and take drugs.

“I wanted to leave but I was given drink,” one said. “I kept saying no and fighting them off. I was very tired and fell asleep. When I woke, I had been raped.”


Another added: “When I was out of it they could do anything they wanted to me.”

A judge concluded that the defendants “selected their victims not because of their race, but because they were young, impressionable, naive, and vulnerable”, including young girls and women with learning difficulties and mental health issues.

The review said victims in the wider North-east included a 12-year-old girl who fell pregnant and other teenagers who underwent abortions, as well as others left with devastating long-term trauma causing substance abuse, mental illness and relationship breakdowns.

Canning Street in Newcastle, where grooming gang member Yassar Hussain lived (Lizzie Dearden)
It warned that one girl had suggested boys were among the victims, and that the sexual exploitation of male victims is likely to be under-reported and hidden.


The review said that while perpetrators’ individual beliefs are not known, they “all appear to come from a non-white, predominantly Asian/British minority ethnic culture or background” – as in Rotherham, Rochdale and Oxfordshire, while a grooming gang in Bristol were from a Somali background.

The review found that “arrogant” perpetrators “show remarkable persistence over long periods in targeting and grooming victims, undeterred by involvement of the police and other agencies”.

Muslim community responds to Newcastle grooming gang


Mr Spicer said: “Tackling sexual exploitation must address the perpetrators – not only preventing their activities but understanding their motivation.”


He added that cultural beliefs and practices have a “significant impact” on abuse, affecting both how abusers treat victims and how able victims feel to report their abuse.

One member of the Newcastle gang, Badrul Hussain, once told a white female ticket inspector: “All white women are only good for one thing – for men like me to f*** and use like trash. That’s all women like you are worth.”

One of the two victims from an African background said her parents blamed her for being raped and believe in spirit possession, adding: “They were going to kick me out.”


Mr Spicer attempted to interview jailed grooming gang members in Newcastle but only one – an asylum seeker who plans to return home at the end of his sentence – agreed.

He admitted abusing girls, including a homeless victim, but “displayed no regret” and claimed the victims “knew what they were doing”, accusing the Government, police and a judge of paying witnesses in a conspiracy against him.

Asked about his views on the UK, the man said “you can get anything here... sex, drugs, alcohol” and spoke in a “derogatory way about lack of morals in British girls and did not go with Muslim girls because there are not many of them”.


Northumbria Police Chief Constable Steve Ashman and Pat Ritchie, chief executive of Newcastle City Council after the Operation Shelter trials in August (PA)
Muslim girls have been abused by grooming gangs in other parts of the country, with a 2013 report containing dozens of case studies.

The review found that before Operation Sanctuary started in 2014, perpetrators in Newcastle were not consistently investigated and disrupted as victims were unwilling to make complaints.

“However, once the true extent of the problem became apparent, the police, the Crown Prosecution Service, the city council and partners across the city put in place a range of measures to disrupt, arrest and imprison offenders while supporting victims regardless of whether they were able to give evidence in court or not,” Mr Spicer said.


“In Newcastle, decisions about taking action were not influenced by lack of concern or interest, misplaced fears about political correctness or fear of being seen as racist. Neither was there any evidence of ineffective leadership or inappropriate interference by senior officials or political leaders to prevent action being taken.”

After two victims who did not know each other reported being abused in early 2015, Operation Shelter was launched and led to the initial arrest of more than 30 men and exposure of abuse dating back to 2007.

A multi-agency response to sexual exploitation was set up to take new reports and continues to operate, directing victims to both law enforcement and specialist support and becoming a national blueprint.


A total of 15 national recommendations included a review of private hire vehicle licensing, issuing specific guidance on the grooming of vulnerable adults and improving cooperation between agencies including the NHS, social care and police.

Mr Spicer also called for the Government to look at whether new laws should be created to “address the behaviour and involvement” of grooming gang members and ensure victims are treated sensitively in court to encourage others to come forward.

“The learning from this review does not only apply to Newcastle,” the report concluded. “It is hoped that it will be used to influence and shape services in other areas of the country and inform the need for national reform.”


The Government has outlined £40m worth of packages to tackle child sexual exploitation, and child abuse specialists are conducting research into different forms of offending.

A spokesperson said: “These are abhorrent crimes that have had a devastating impact on the lives of the victims involved.

“We have done more than any other Government to tackle child sexual abuse. It has been declared a national threat and we are investing millions of pounds to enable officers to actively seek out and bring offenders to justice. We will now look carefully at the recommendations in the joint serious case review.”
Esto ya lo subiste a este hilo hace poco. qué casualidad que siempre se te olvida subir a los violadores en grupo y a las redes de explotación sexual (también de menores) dirigidos por blancos y "cristianos".

Vete a trolear al hilo de los emigrantes anda, que lo de hacer campaña para George W y currar "mano a mano" con la mujer de Cheney te ha rayado el chip.
 
Esto ya lo subiste al hilo hace poco. Siemore se te olvida subir a los violadores en grupo y a las redes de explotación sexual (también de menores) dirigidos por blancos y "cristianos".

Vete a trolear al hilo de los emigrantes anda, que lo de hacer campaña para George W y currar "mano a mano" con la mujer de Cheney tiene su aquel.

Es George H.W. Que odio tienes a los tuyos. Yo me doy por vencido.

Estos pakistanis iban a por los cuerpos de niñas pequeñas inglesas, ninguna víctima era musulmana. Miles de niñas víctimas, en todas las esquinas del RU.

Anne Maria Waters, lesbiana, feminista, fundadora del partido FOr Britain, tiene todo la razón del mundo para querer a su país, para no ceder ante la barbarie.
Y no vamos a ceder.
 
Última edición:
Es George H.W. Que odio tienes a los tuyos. Yo me doy por vencido.

Estos pakistanis iban a por los cuerpos de niñas pequeñas inglesas, ninguna víctima era musulmana. Miles de niñas víctimas, en todas las esquinas del RU.

Anne Maria Waters, lesbiana, feminista, fundadora del partido FOr Britain, tiene todo la razón del mundo para querer a su país, para no ceder ante la barbarie.
Y no vamos a ceder.

Y cuántos "cristianos" europeos van a por los cuerpos de niñas y niños pequeños tailandeses, antillanos, magrebíes, mexicanas ... Acaso lo ordena el Evangelio? Y qué me dices de los "judios" van a por los cuerpos de niñas y niños pequeños "cristianos"? Acaso lo ordena la Torá?

Los "míos" son mis congéneres (la traza humana) y no los divido en "buenos" y "malos" en función de s*x*, etnia, religión. Las víctimas son víctimas y los abusadores son abusadores y ya. El crimen organizado no tiene "nacionalidad". A esos miserables de Rotherham los han detenido y condenado ¿no? Pues no es es el caso en las más altas instancias, donde reina la impunidad.

Vete a hablar del moro muza al hilo de los emigrantes, que esta conversación ya la hemos tenido en éste hilo (y en algún otro) y siempre vuelves con lo mismo. El hilo infecto ese en el que se justifica que unos vikingos de dos metros de largo salgan a las calles con bates de beisbol a apalear a chiquillos renegridos. La misma gente que luego aplaude que el ejercito israelí masacre a palestinos desarmados o la Guardia Civil dispare a subsaharianos desharrapados a la deriva. Van a ser los más indicados para hablar de fascismo y supremacismo. Ozú.

Al tema. Cataluña y el derecho a decidir.
 
Última edición por un moderador:
A veces tengo la sensación, que se enreda mucho y no se aporta nada.Es como un bucle que va girando de un extremo a otro, a cual más descabellado.Mucho ruido y pocas nueces:LOL::LOL::LOL: donde sale a la luz la parte más visceral de la gente,A mi juicio el tema catalán, se le fue de las manos al anterior gobierno y la respuesta fue desproporcionada e inútil.Patadas a la Constitución le ha dado y muchas el anterior gobierno,por muchos aliados que tenga entre la población civil,no se puede obviar todo lo que han hecho, retorciendo las leyes hasta extremos exagerados.Resulta que ladrones de guante blanco son recompensados con las puertas giratorias,por hacer políticas en contra de los intereses ciudadanos y están sacando pecho de sus logros personales,mientras que los que "molestan" politicamente se les encarcelan lejos de sus familias,"provisionalmente" y llevan ya más de medio año en esas condiciones.Como les van a creer y respetar en los demás países europeos?? Tienen tantas dudas de la justicia española, que no terminan de decidir que hacer con los exiliados políticos catalanes.Esa es la imagen que se está proyectando al exterior.No hay nada más patético que la triste imagen que está dando España en su inmadura democracia.La democracia no es un pin que te lo pones en la chaqueta,se es demócrata por que lo sientes y lo vives,no por que lo digas mil veces y luego te vas por los cerros de Ubeda.
 
La ANC prepara una campaña de boicot a empresas no independentistas
La organización presidida por Paluzie lanzará una página web en la que se divulgarán las compañías que considera que están “comprometidas” con el proyecto político que defiende


PATROCINADO POR
lg.php

elisenda-paluzie.jpeg

La presidenta de la ANC, Elisenda Paluzie / EUROPA PRESS
ARCHIVADO EN: INDEPENDENCIA, ANC, BOICOT, ELISENDA PALUZIE
REDACCIÓN CRÓNICA GLOBAL @cronicaglobal
5.06.2018 07:51 h.
3 min
La Assemblea Nacional Catalana (ANC) quiere activar la campaña de “consumo responsable con la república”. Una iniciativa con la que pretende dar un paso más al llamamiento al boicot a las empresas que la organización presidida por Elisenda Paluzie considera que no han apoyado el proyecto político independentista.

En enero publicó una guía con “14 alternativas a las grandes empresas del Ibex”, aunque la iniciativa pasó desapercibida. La comisión Fem República quiere recuperarla y darle más recorrido. Llama a avanzar hacia la “soberanía económica” con la creación de una página web en la que se señalen las entidades bancarias, aseguradoras, operadoras telefónicas o compañías energéticas que pasan el examen político para ser aptas para el consumo, indican fuentes de la organización a La Vanguardia.



Debilitar al “Ibex”
Los mismos interlocutores indican que desde octubre, cuando se inició la fuga de empresas, han recibido peticiones de los miembros de la organización para activar alguna medida que “debilite a las empresas del Ibex”. Se afirma que el objetivo es “fortalecer a las compañías que apuestan por Cataluña” aunque reconocen la complejidad de su llamamiento al boicot.

Desde la organización independentista apuntan que se buscará construir una comunidad virtual que dé directrices sobre el consumo desde ese portal.


Acciones de consumo


No es la primera ocasión en que la ANC emprende una actuación de consumo que ha levantado polvareda. El pasado 20 de octubre, cuando la tensión política estaba en un momento álgido en Cataluña, hizo un llamamiento junto a Òmnium Cultural a sus seguidores para retirar pequeñas cantidades de dinero de los bancos.

Al final, esta iniciativa que pretendía colapsar la red de cajeros en Cataluña como medida de presión política tuvo una respuesta tímida. La campaña que se reanuda ahora pretende tener un mayor alcance.


Estupendo ya sabemos quien quies es quien
 
Llarena rechaza la recusación de los ex consejeros Comín y Serret
comin-serret-655x368.jpg

El ex conseller Comín y la ex consellera Serret.
2 Comentarios


El juez del Supremo Pablo Llarena, ha rechazado este jueves de plano la recusación que presentaron contra él los ex consejeros fugados en Bélgica Toni Comín y Meritxell Serret al considerarla un “fraude procesal”, que se produce a los seis meses de iniciar la instrucción, una decisión que no es recurrible.

Ambos presentaron el pasado 5 de junio en Bélgica una demanda civil contra el juez y, basándose en la misma, pretendían cuestionar la imparcialidad del magistrado, por lo que pedían su recusación.

En un auto, Llarena les responde que para que la existencia de un enfrentamiento en los tribunales con un juez pueda actuar como causa de recusación contra él, la cuestión debe haber sido planteada antes, y no después, de que este magistrado se ocupe de un proceso en el que quien le recusa esté implicado.


Lo contrario permitiría un fraude de ley, recuerda el magistrado que instruye la causa del “procés” desde hace más de seis meses.

Ello, añade, dejaría en manos de la voluntad de las partes apartar a cualquier instructor cuando discrepen del contenido de su investigación, mediante la presentación de una demanda contra él después de iniciada la instrucción, como entiende sucede en este caso, ya que la iniciativa responde a la discrepancia de los ex consellers con la instrucción penal desarrollada en España.


Carece de Competencia
Y agrega que “dado que la demanda únicamente se impulsa para que un tribunal extranjero que carece de competencia para ello emita un juicio valorativo de la actuación jurisdiccional española, se constata que el procedimiento civil se instrumentaliza para impulsar una recusación que permita eludir al juez ordinario”.

El juez menciona también la doctrina del Supremo, que señala que la causa de abstención de un juez consistente en “tener pleito pendiente” con alguna de las partes se refiere exclusivamente al “que exista con anterioridad a la designación y composición de la Sala para el enjuiciamiento.

Por lo tanto, precisa, “no entendiéndose por tal los pleitos que de futuro se puedan plantear por las partes una vez que se sabe la composición de dicha Sala a efectos de con ello no solo dilatar el procedimiento sino también apartar de su conocimiento al juez”.

Llarena indica que los ex consellers centran su demanda civil en unas declaraciones suyas y en una supuesta parcialidad y partidismo desplegado en esta causa, pero indica que dichas declaraciones públicas “no sólo son plenamente respetuosas con la presunción de inocencia y expresamente la enfatizan en dos pasajes de la alocución, sino que se limitan a reflejar la existencia de un pronóstico inicial de tipicidad para los hechos investigados”.

“La inadmisión de la recusación formulada resulta así obligada, pues el procedimiento en el que se funda no existía con anterioridad a la designación de este instructor, sino que ha surgido por la voluntad de los procesados y por su discrepancia con el contenido de la investigación, lo que no puede servir de base para una recusación por existencia de pleito pendiente entre el juez y las partes”, concluye el juez.
jueces.jpg
 
Estado
Cerrado para nuevas respuestas
Back