Money often brings out the darker aspects of family relationships. The Ostos family is no exception. With the death of patriarch Jaime Ostos two years ago, his children have been involved in a public battle over the distribution of his assets.
Jacobo Ostos had been challenging the rest of his brothers to face each other on a set for several weeks to clarify this dispute and Jaime Ostos Jr. has taken up the gauntlet. Both brothers sat down on ¡De Viernes!, where they made it clear that their disagreements are far from being resolved.
So much so that Jaime brought out all his artillery against his brother, who received him with a lawsuit, and wanted to ruin his professional career as a lawyer. In this sense, he assured that Jacobo committed a significant fraud at the university and, therefore, does not deserve the title that he boasts: “You are a lawyer, if you want I can count on a law degree. If you want, I’ll say it.”
According to Jaime, Jacobo would have used questionable methods during his university career: “He passed it with a earpiece. “That’s how you approved it.” He would have discovered this by chance: “I went somewhere and there was a friend of yours who gave you the exams from the car.”
Furthermore, he pointed out that Jacobo had not complied with the formal processes required to exercise certain legal functions, thus disqualifying the demand that he had presented to him at the beginning of the interview: “You can tell because you just gave it to me, you have not done the exams to do court notification service. That’s a wet paper. For it to reach me, it has to reach me legally.”
Jacobo, for his part, did not remain silent in the face of his older brother’s accusations and responded firmly, insinuating that the judicial process he has started will continue its course even if Jaime does not believe it: “It will come to you.”
In addition, he also tried to clarify his academic and professional situation in front of the cameras: ”I’m going to explain to you what it’s like as a lawyer. “I have studied a degree in Law at the Complutense in the ’53 plan. I don’t have to take competitive exams, as soon as I graduated, I was already a lawyer.”