Luana’s mother points to Claudio Vigneta’s attempts to quell complaints: “The government is guilty”

2024-08-06 17:11:55

The second day of the trial against former Civil Defense chief Diego Concha began with an intense story. From just 10 a.m. to noon, Cristina Caminos, the mother of firefighter Luana Ludueña, according to charges Tried to enter Etac and was sexually abused by former officers until she committed suicide.

In the process, Concha was charged with four acts. Three of the incidents were incidents of gender-based violence against her former partners in 2021. That’s why the murder charge weighs heavily on him.

The hearing took place in Criminal Chamber 3 before a popular jury.

The events being judged occurred between November 14, 2021 (Election Day) and January 21, 2022.

The charges allege that on Sunday, November 14, Concha summoned Luana to talk, looked for her at the bus terminal and took her to a hotel where the sexual assault occurred.

According to the story Christina told the court, that incident changed her daughter’s life. “That wasn’t Luana, she was crying, she was locked in her room and she said she wanted to die.”

On November 28, she attempted suicide and was eventually hospitalized in a nursing center. Concha’s immediate superior, Minister of Climate Risk Management, Disasters and Civil Protection Claudio Vignetta, was present at the time.

In Cristina’s story, officers always tried to provide social work coverage but also tried to convince the family not to file a complaint or engage with the media.

Luanna had not yet filed the complaint that occurred days later. While she was hospitalized, the Vera Carlos Paz investigative prosecutor heard her first testimony accusing Concha of alleged sexual abuse.

When he is discharged from the hospital, Luana tells him that Emiliano Conti showed up at the clinic. He is a firefighter and she develops a relationship with him. “He wanted me to change my story, that he was Concha’s friend and he always defended him,” the mother recalled.

Christina went on to describe the emotional breakdown that affected her daughter. He said he told him: “I want to go out and hang myself, I want my life to be the same as it was before, but that’s not going to happen.” “He told me he was ashamed and that he resigned from the fire station so as not to come back. , it was his lifelong passion,” he said.

“In the early morning of January 20th – the story continues – I went to his room. He didn’t want to look at me. I talked to her a lot and told her we were all with her; “There was a letter on the bedside table. “

“He told me ‘go away, I don’t need any more help’; he said no but I didn’t leave. I asked her to stay with me and she hugged me as tightly as she had ever hugged me “Forgive me, I can’t take it anymore,” he told me; “This is the last time I hug her,” Christina said in a broken voice.

“I grabbed the letter and left,” she continued. “I couldn’t accept that she would do something like this because she was a very determined, energetic girl.”

Cristina left the home and around 10:30 a.m. on January 20, they told her Luana had left. They saw her walking toward the cemetery holding her dog’s leash. They went there and found her in a grove of eucalyptus trees.

Luana Luduña died the next day.

During her testimony, the mother read to everyone in the room a letter she had written to her, dated January 19 at 11pm. So he left letters for each family member. In all of these incidents, she begged for forgiveness, admitted that she could not overcome what she had been through, and begged them to fight for her.

“I think the government is guilty because they shouldn’t have people like this; they didn’t take care of Luana,” he concluded.

Diego Concha was led out of the courtroom before Cristina Caminos could begin her statement. His lawyers, Carlos Hairabedián and Sebastián Becerra Ferrer, remain.

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