2023-10-12 16:19:23
The murder of Blas Correas was divided into three parallel judicial cases, of which two are in the process of being resolved. The first ended with 11 police officers sentenced, two of them to life imprisonment. Case II is regarding the denial of three employees of the Aconcagua Clinic who refused to assist the teenager when he was dying.. And the “Blas III” case investigates former officials for alleged participation in the events and other crimes.
Within the framework of the “Blas II” case, this Thursday it was learned that one of the three employees involved will face an abbreviated trial which will take place next Tuesday. The procedural situation of Fernando Gabriel Casalino, a sanatorium worker, was unresolved in the Courts.
His defense attorney José D’Antona and prosecutor Fernando López Villagra, with knowledge of complainant Alejandro Pérez Moreno, They agreed to the abbreviated trial and a suspended sentence of two years and six months in prison. for the crime of abandonment of person.
The other two employees of the clinic, Guadalupe María Laura Moya and Paola Andrea Mezzacapo, were partially acquitted last month by the 8th Crime Chamber of Córdoba following paying, as established by law, a financial fine of 12,500 pesos each. They were accused of failing to help Blas when he was still breathing.
The two young women also offered financial compensation to the family of the murdered teenager for a total sum of 300 thousand pesos. Blas’s parents intend to allocate that amount for charitable purposes.
A police officer, on trial accused of inventing a traffic ticket in Córdoba
In dialogue with CORDOBA PROFILESoledad Laciar, mother of Blas Correas, considered next Tuesday’s abbreviated trial as “very important” because Casalino will plead guilty for his actions.
According to the file, during the early hours of August 6, 2020, the 42-year-old employee left the sanatorium and did not allow the teenager to be assisted. He helped his friends carry him back to the car and suggested they take him to the Emergency Hospital.
“We are satisfied that justice will be done for Blas beyond the punitive sanctions and if this person who committed a humanitarian act because, beyond abandoning the person, helped load Blas back into the vehicle, we are satisfied with what justice determines,” Pérez Moreno told Radio Universidad.
The lawyer reproached “the attitude of the other two people (Mezzacapo and Moya), who were accused and who paid $12,500 each, they got rid of the trap without even – and we had formally asked them – that they at least have a humanitarian act of apologizing for what they had not done, which was precisely the omission of assistance that they were accused of.”
“At no time did they have a motherly, humanitarian gesture of saying ‘we apologize, the truth is we acted like this…’ for whatever reason,” Pérez Moreno concluded.
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