Page 35 of 42 FirstFirst ... 253334353637 ... LastLast
Results 341 to 350 of 419

Thread: Alcasser teenage girls case, Spain

  1. #341
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    Since last August, there is a book in English language about the three girls, so it's the first time someone has written a book in another language different from Spanish one. The book is not only for Miriam, Toñi and Desirée, but also for few others unsolved murders which happened back between 1980 and 1999.
    Jenny Ashford - The Faceless Villain Volume Three:

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Faceless-Vi.../dp/1089373821
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 04:43 PM.

  2. #342
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    There is another documentary of The Alcásser Girls which contains an interview with Fernando García which was broadcasted last September (therefore after the documentary Netflix), on the nationwide television channel Cuatro. I've seen it recently, so I will make a summary of it because it is in Spanish.
    It includes a real-time survey, so 90% of viewers have told that they don't believe the official story.
    The documentary begins with a reconstruction of events at La Romana during nighttime.



    Then Fernando García is interviewed and told several things:

    He claimed that he saw the videotape physically, but Juan Ignacio Blanco did not allow him to see its graphic content, so Fernando García did not want to see the alleged disturbing images of the three tortured girls.
    He did not give importance to the event of the hooded man who had frightened Miriam because he had seen a few times how a homeless was hiding at the entrance of the building to sleep.

    He said that he believes Juan Ignacio Blanco was a good man who dedicated himself exclusively to his work to solve this case.
    He affirmed that he still thinks that the murderers of the three girls were neither Antonio Anglés nor Miguel Ricart.
    He claimed that he had strong reasons to suspect that something wrong was going on with the official story when, in the earliest days, he saw the newspapers with the news of the two suspects, so he thought that such an elaborate and very sadistic crime could not be the work of two wimps like Antonio Anglés and Miguel Ricart.

    He claimed to be in disagreement with the way the Netflix documentary talks about himself.
    He said that he still hopes the truth will be known one day.
    He claimed to be in disagreement because he was taken to London for 'make the three corpses appear' at La Romana.




    Then, the interview with the forensic Doctor Frontela took place.

    He said the bones found next to the grave last June should come from the boneless hand of the first corpse.
    He said that lifting the bodies was a botched job.
    He said he bought an argon ultraviolet light machine to better analyze the carpet in depth, but the court didn't let him to do so since the court suddenly ordered him to return the items that initially needed to be analysed by himself.
    He said that if he had been allowed to finish the analyse of the carpet, in that case he would have found the identity of all the killers.




    Finally, the interview of the wife of the deceased Juan Ignacio Blanco took place.

    She said that they had been threatened by someone who send letters in their mailbox and that one day, while driving on a road, someone in another car tried to send-off them from the road.
    She said the media slandered Juan Ignacio Blanco with the false rumour that he suffered from drug problems and that he eventually went to the slums of Madrid's suburbs to buy drugs.
    She said that she doesn't know where the videotape is located from and that Juan Ignacio Blanco died quickly in two days, so that he did not have time to organise his own belongings.

    This is the documentary in Spanish language:
    https://www.cuatro.com/cuarto-mileni...820045055.html
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 04:45 PM.

  3. #343
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    Hi everyone! Today I want to show you an interesting thing. It's an audio file from 2017 from Miriam García's grandmother (and Fernando García's mother as well), who is called María Jesús Mediano, when a day she rang the Cadena Ser nationwide radio station during the prime time:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwikCLbZak4

    She cried at the beginning whilst she has been remembering Miriam, and then she talked about how Fernando García suffered strong ageing by the emotional impact of the crime.
    Then she told that Fernando García was taken to London to better make the finding of the three corpses at La Romana, so, although she really appreciates the work of the enlisted police officers during the disappearance of the three girls, she also talked about her own disagreement with the highest circles of the Spaniard elite because she believes there was a plot.

    She told that Antonio Anglés and Miguel Ricart are just the scapegoats.
    She told that Fernando García claimed his disagreement with the justice system by all those mistakes they did, and that is the reason that the judicial system was carrying out a strong discredit campaign (including the imposition of several fines) against Fernando García.
    She told that the judicial system even tried to imprison Fernando García, but they finally had rejected to do so because the whole Spaniard people may attempt to create riots.

    Likewise, she said that Miriam García's mother died very young at the age of 45 because of grief.
    She said she believes the three girls died a month after their disappearance according to some statements coming from the forensic doctor Frontela's job.
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 04:54 PM.

  4. #344
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    There is something new about The Alcásser Girls, and is not related to the girls themselves, but still is something spooky.

    On Friday 10th January 2020, a 49-year-old man named Juan Pedro from Toledo, central Spain, when he returned to his mother's house after work at 15:00, he found the body of his 80-year-old mother with clues of both physical and sexual violence, and a few days later he was arrested by police because they don't believe his alibi. The mother's name was Renné Yvonne Belveze Ibos, therefore French.

    The police found that Juan Pedro has been a strong supporter to the conspiracy theories of the Alcàsser murders since may years ago, especially in the Spaniard forums Forocoches and Rumorología.
    In fact, some internet users have recently reported that, in November 2019, Juan Pedro put on the Rumorología forum the name and one photo of a woman from Alcàsser who, according to him, is the woman who lured the three girls the day they vanished by when taking them to another unknown location different from Coolor nightclub.
    His solicitor, named José Luis Chorot, still believes the innocence of his customer and Juan Pedro also claimed his own innocence, but the media make use of this sad crime to discredit in front of the whole country with a vile behaviour to all those who do not believe the official story, so we will see how this crime is solved.

    Once again there is a lot of controversy on the Spaniard forums as some people believe that Juan Pedro is the alleged culprit and that he has a mental illness that has not yet been diagnosed, whilst some others believe his innocence and that he has received some punishment after crossing a red line.

    RIP Renné.

    Source in Spanish: https://www.abc.es/espana/castilla-l...2_noticia.html
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 04:56 PM.

  5. #345
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    There are some breaking news within the last days!

    1. The film called '75 Días' will be premiered within the Málaga film festival from 13th to 28th March 2020. The filmmaker, named Marc Romero, told that the film is going to put special emphasis on the unclear facts of this crime so far.
    Here you can see the trailer: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ot8p...be&app=desktop

    2. Last Wednesday, some DNA traces has been extracted from the small human bones that were found last June nearby the clandestine grave by a couple who went there to pay tribute to the girls after the release of the Netflix documentary, so the judge requested both the mother of Desirée and the father of Miriam to send some DNA samples for further identification, just to compare the genetic between theirs and the bones. I forgot to say that the relatives of Toñi will not be checked because her corpse didn't show lack of bones, but Miriam and Desirée as they lacked some few bones.

    I'm guessing what will happen if the bones didn't belong to the three girls.
    If so, will the judge request some DNA from the relatives of Antonio Anglés? I don't think so because this way the Spanish judicial system will act against their own interests because they still want to keep the crap official story alive.
    Will they request some DNA samples from the relatives of others people who got missing within those years? I don't think so either.
    Source in Spanish: https://www.abc.es/espana/comunidad-...6_noticia.html

    3. The judge will request the captain of the boat City of Plymouth, named Kennet Farquharson Steven, to clarify whether Antonio Anglés stayed in his boat or not and if someone of the crew had helped Antonio to flee the boat when they approached the eastern coast of Ireland somewhere near Dublin. If they are not able to identify Antonio Anglés there, then the story of his travel from Lisbon to Ireland is fake, then the official story would become quite far-fetched.
    Source in Spanish: https://www.20minutos.es/noticia/415...-huyo-asesino/
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 04:59 PM.

  6. #346
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    Let's see a link from a British newspaper about the call from the Spanish judicial system to the captain of City of Plymouth. I don't think all of this would be useful to solve the crime, yet there were no proofs of Antonio Anglés staying there.
    Well, a fingerprint had been found inside the berth room were the crew had locked up the unknown stowaway man, but it wasn't checked with the ones of Antonio Anglés.
    I don't think the UK judicial system would collaborate as it seems unlikely that this inquiry would shred light on this weird story about Antonio Anglés fleeing successfully the Iberian Peninsula by maritime transport. Anyway, it's too late to try this inquiry, though.

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...r-suspect.html
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 05:00 PM.

  7. #347
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    The film '75 Días' will be released next 16th March 2020 in the city of Málaga, southern Spain, so I hope the current Covid-19 outbreak won't shut down the film festival there.

    Anyway, even if it's cancelled, by early May it's expected to be released in Spanish cinemas. It's likely also that this film will be released on other media such as TV, DVD, or even streaming media as well. If so, the film will be available worldwide with English subtitles.
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 05:01 PM.

  8. #348
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    This is not related with the Alcasser Murders, but it shows how corrupt the highest circles of Spain are. It is believed that Corinna Larsen knows some top secret information which would overthrow the Spaniard monarchy:

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/202...ts-foundation/

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...tish-soil.html
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 05:03 PM.

  9. #349
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    The former chief of the Civil Guard police during the early 90s, Luis Roldán, was imprisoned because of corruption scandals, and it was known that he has received millions of pesetas (ancient Spanish coin) from some businessmen, so, being the highest responsible for the police management within the Alcàsser case makes everything even more fishy:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luis_Roldan
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 05:04 PM.

  10. #350
    Senior Member Frequent Poster
    Join Date
    Jun 2014
    Location
    Spain, Europe
    Posts
    418
    Quote Originally Posted by overdrive1979 View Post
    The film '75 Días' will be released next 16th March 2020 in the city of Málaga, southern Spain, so I hope the current Covid-19 outbreak won't shut down the film festival there.

    Anyway, even if it's cancelled, by early May it's expected to be released in Spanish cinemas. It's likely also that this film will be released on other media such as TV, DVD, or even streaming media as well. If so, the film will be available worldwide with English subtitles.
    I can't wait for this film, but unfortunately our government is going to extend the current Covid-19 lockdown for weeks, so nobody knows when this film will be released.
    Last edited by overdrive1979; 05-04-2021 at 05:08 PM.

Page 35 of 42 FirstFirst ... 253334353637 ... LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •