Ángel Cristo Jr has left for Survivors with the best news he could receive before heading to Honduras. The mother of his son denounced him last year before the violence against women court number 7 in Madrid. The case was filed but she appealed to the Court, which last Thursday, February 29, she filed again and declared the dismissal of the case. We have accessed the order of section 27 of the Provincial Court of Madrid, where in its 6 pages it states “that the appeal filed is dismissed… with the support of the public prosecutor’s office… and the dismissal and archiving of the proceedings is agreed.”
Now we have learned that his ex reported Ángel for receiving insults such as “bitch”, “whore” and “crazy” in addition to a situation of “harassment” due to continuous calls and “physical attacks.” Both the court against Violence against Women and the Court agree that “there is not sufficient incriminating evidence against the person under investigation.” The order relates that in the audio file provided by the plaintiff to show the insults “you can only hear the expression ‘silly’ that has to be agreed upon with the judge ‘a quo’ given the context of the discussion, it lacks the substance to be criminally classified. ”.
Regarding the situation of harassment with constant calls “the judge’s criteria must also be shared…where a problematic situation of the parties is deduced in relation to the visits of their common minor daughter, without inferring that the accused wants to bend in “in any way the will of the victim or modify his daily life, especially when there is no list of calls received.” Regarding the attacks, they are clear stating that “there are no indications for the continuation of the procedure.”
This matter, so important, was used by Ángel’s family, essentially by his mother Bárbara Rey, to overshadow her story and point the finger at her son. When his interview was announced, Bárbara warned of the barrage of negative information about him and that they were silent, “I am in pain because I know they are going to hurt him. “You don’t know where you’ve gotten yourself, may God protect you, protect you and help you.”
Ángel headed to the Telecinco program in Honduras yesterday Sunday with a warning also from his mother and his sister Sofía through a burofax that they sent at the end of last week, the same day that his case was filed. Through the De Castro law firm, they warned that both Bárbara and Sofía had decided to “take legal action to safeguard their fundamental rights,” all of this “despite the deep pain that this decision entails for them.” And they also required that, knowing about Ángel’s participation in Survivors, they requested that he cease his behavior and refrain from continuing with the demonstrations.
The letter warns that everything her son said, such as that Bárbara blackmailed Juan Carlos I, in which he was the protagonist taking photographs, violated his rights to honor, privacy and self-image. Textual “certain defamations regarding some alleged photographs of Ms. García with third parties.” Photographs, which, by the way, were not the first time they had been talked about, nor was her son the first to do so. Of course, he positioned himself as the protagonist because he stated that it was his mother who asked him to do them.