Carlo Constanzia, son of Mar Flores, has been in the news in recent days after receiving a 21-month prison sentence for fraud. The information, which left the model and actress visibly affected, has been widely covered by the media despite the details of it being known little by little.

After the convicted person himself has already spoken about the issue, the identities of some of those affected by Constanzia’s practices begin to become known. One of them, who goes by the name of Abraham, has detailed his case in Y ahora Sonsoles, the Sonsoles Ónega program on Antena 3.

“31,200 euros, is what I have given to these businessmen, supposedly businessmen, for luxury sales,” the man began by recounting. Everything happened “for 5 years we have already been behind this problem, 5 years lost”, as he explained, after Carlo put him in contact with Roberto, another of those involved in the plot.

“We started negotiating a vehicle and everything was fine; at the beginning everything was great, we had to pay 30%, they came to my house to sign a contract and deliver the bills; we went to the bank and that’s why we ate together, everything was fine. , all great, and it all sounded good,” he continued.

It is at this point in the story that everything begins to go wrong, according to Abraham’s account. “After a month there is no car, supposedly in 5 or 6 days I would have the vehicle, a vehicle that came down from Austria; the documentation that they sent me is for a real vehicle and that it existed, but at no time was it sold to this company, nor was any management carried out with the company in Spain”, the man personally verified.

Months later, “in September”, the news broke that “the cars were supposedly withheld by customs”, something to which Abraham gave credibility by not knowing how imports work. “They send me a falsified document from the Treasury, that the car is being held at the border,” he explains. Carlo accused Roberto, the other person involved, of these bad practices: “He said that it fell into the wrong person,” Abraham recounted in Y ahora Sonsoles, but they ended up “both of them disappearing.”