The premiere of the Netflix series The Asunta Case has once again put the terrible crime of the 12-year-old girl in the center of the media spotlight, which shocked the entire country. Asunta Basterra Porto was murdered at the hands of her own adoptive parents, Alfonso Basterra and Rosario Porto, in September 2013 in the Galician municipality of Teo.
Those who were husband and wife immediately became the main suspects of the crime thanks to the findings that investigators made in the lawyer’s parents’ house – where the crime was committed – and to the security recordings of key places that they dismantled. their first testimonies. After a long judicial process, both were sentenced to 18 years in prison for the murder.
Currently, Asunta’s father is still serving his sentence in Teixeiro prison, in A Coruña, without having yet had any prison permit. Now, thanks to content creator @unatalgorritos, what the prison routine of the father of the 12-year-old girl who was murdered in 2013 is like has come to light.
”Since the trial and his subsequent conviction, Alfonso has been seen as an impenetrable man by those who have dealt with him. At no time has he confessed or shown regret, ” the tiktoker began saying in the video. ”It has also emerged that his behavior in prison has been conflictive. He has been caught smuggling contraband with other inmates. In fact, Alfonso was transferred two years ago to a harsher module and this happened when an official caught him dealing with other inmates inside the prison,’ she said.
The content creator claimed that Basterra had also had conflicts with other inmates and bad behavior with prison guards. Regarding her daily routine, the influencer revealed the following: ”He gets up in the morning, tidies up the cell and makes the bed, has breakfast and goes straight to the library to surround himself with books. He does not have any relationship of trust with any inmate, partly because of the high opinion he has of himself and that he considers himself intellectually very superior to the rest of the inmates and officials.”
Alfonso Basterra still has eight years left in prison, but in January 2024 he tried to request the third degree of prison. ”This would allow him to leave prison and enter a social reintegration center, where he would only have to go to sleep. But he did not achieve his goal because penitentiary institutions rejected his request, in part for not showing remorse for his behavior,’ he detailed.