Bernardo Montoya ha usado su derecho a su última palabra en el juicio y ha sido para pedir perdón a la familia de Laura Luelmo. Justo tres días después de que en la primera sesión del juicio se declarara inocente de todos los cargos que se le imputan en el asesinato.
En declaraciones a los periodistas tras la conclusión de la sesión de hoy, su abogado, Miguel Rivera, ha indicado que Montoya ha empezado pidiendo perdón a la familia “por todo lo ocurrido pero sin perjuicio de dar su versión, porque de una forma u otra está involucrado ya que él reconoce haber trasladado el cuerpo, por tanto en mayor o medida motivo para pedir disculpas tiene”.
Posteriormente, se ha ratificado en la versión de que la autora de crimen de la joven de 26 años en El Campillo (Huelva) en diciembre de 2018 es una expareja suya, algo que ya mantuvo en su primera declaración en el juicio, que se celebra a puerta cerrada.
Esta tarde han presentado sus informes el Ministerio Fiscal, la acusación particular y la popular que ejerce la Junta de Andalucía, que coinciden en solicitar 20 años de prisión por el delito de detención ilegal, 12 por el de agresión sexual y prisión permanente revisable por el de asesinato.
Mañana se conocerá el veredicto del jurado y, con posterioridad, una sentencia que Rivera supone que va a ser “desfavorable y excesiva”, por lo que ha adelantado que “casi con seguridad llegará al Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Andalucía”.
A Femen activist holds a placard reading "More heard dead than alive", and "I didn't want to die" (on her chest) during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the violence against ...
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TOPSHOT - Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner in 2019, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partne...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the ...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner in 2019, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and agai...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner in 2019, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and agai...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner in 2019, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and agai...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner in 2019, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and agai...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the ...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the ...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Leader of the feminist activist group Femen Inna Shevchenko (front) and Femen activists hold placards reading "More heard dead than alive", "I didn't want to die" during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partn...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the ...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Leader of the feminist activist group Femen Inna Shevchenko (front) and Femen activists hold placards reading "More heard dead than alive", "I didn't want to die" during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partn...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards reading "Not one more", "More heard dead than alive", "I didn't want to die" during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the violence against women,...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards shaped as tombstones, reading the name and the age of each women killed this year by their partner, during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the ...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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A Femen activist, with "I'll be considered seriously when I will be dead." written on her chest, holds a flare during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the violence against wo...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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TOPSHOT - Leader of the feminist activist group Femen Inna Shevchenko (front) and Femen activists hold placards reading "More heard dead than alive", "I didn't want to die" during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by t...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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Femen activists hold placards reading "Not one more", "More heard dead than alive", "I didn't want to die" during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the violence against women,...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images
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A Femen activist holds a placard reading "More heard dead than alive", and "I didn't want to die" (on her chest) during a protest action dedicated to the memory of the women killed by their partner or ex-partner and against the violence against ...
LUCAS BARIOULET via Getty Images