Julián Muñoz is in the media spotlight due to his complicated state of health. The former mayor of Marbella is now home after spending a few weeks in hospital for respiratory problems. Such is the severity that Mayte Zaldívar, with whom she has regained a good relationship, has not wanted to separate from her husband.
For this reason, Isa Pantoja has not hesitated to talk about him these days. “I lived with him for many years and I have that love for him. He has treated me very well. I wish him to recover and get over it as soon as possible,” she said. Now, Isabel Pantoja’s daughter wanted to put her opinion on the Malaya Case on the table.
Among other things, he has begun to relate that Julián Muñoz has not spoken very well of his mother in recent years. “In the last interview he gives about her, he doesn’t say good things. Her feeling for her is super negative,” he continued. So, that’s when Joaquín Prat wanted to know if she thinks that her mother went to prison because of the exedil. Something to which she has responded with a blunt: “Yes.”
“So I’m not going to have a further relationship with him either and it wouldn’t make sense either,” he added. Given this, the collaborators have jumped out to recriminate the words of Pantoja’s daughter. “Understand that you are asking me as a daughter. I don’t care, you can’t ask me to be objective because I’m not objective at all at the moment when I sit here to talk about my life and my family, because I can’t “, he declared.
And for Isa Pantoja, her mother’s involvement in the Malaya Case was a “cluster of things” and “bad decisions.” Something of which she does not have very good memories, since Isabel Pantoja entered prison when Isa was only 16 years old. “I was hospitalized and I asked that they let me go home that day. You notice that they are looking at you. And then it is true that she explained to me how the whole process was going to be,” she stated.
“When she entered prison, she was with me that last night. She didn’t tell anyone. She didn’t say anything to my brother and she slept with me the last night and explained the whole process to me. I was very young and it was to explain to me, especially everything, the media pressure,” he said.
And, for her, the worst thing was experiencing the “parallel media trial”: “We all suffered it.” Now, several years later, she is clear that no one will ever take that “pain” and “suffering” away from her. So much so, that she has experienced some tense situations during her university life due to this matter.
“At the University they gave me the example of money laundering and everyone turned to look at me in the criminal law class. They didn’t say my mother’s name, but they turned. I’ve gotten over it, but I’m not happy about it” , he has confessed.