New information on the case of the death of Olivia García, the six-year-old girl allegedly murdered by her mother in October last year in Gijón. The forensic report confirms that the minor died from an overdose of lorazepam, of almost more than triple what is necessary to end the life of an adult, according to what La Nueva España published on Tuesday.

The autopsy, dated March 14, reveals that little Olivia died from ingesting a lethal cocktail of pills, supposedly supplied by Noemí Martínez, her parent. In her body they found concentrations of 0.7 milligrams per liter of blood of the anxiolytic, which caused Olivia to die in a few hours.

Specifically, the time of death was set at midnight on October 29, shortly after she had arrived in Gijón with her mother from Segovica, where Noemí had picked her up from her father, Eugenio García, who had just Get custody of your daughter.

According to the same sources of the Asturian newspaper, the report indicates that the minor died due to “central neurological depression due to poisoning by antiepileptics, sedative-hypnotics and antiparkinsonian drugs.”

While waiting for the trial to take place, Noemí has ​​been in provisional detention since last November, in the women’s prison of Brieva (Ávila). She is accused of having killed her daughter Olivia, found dead at a home in Gijón, the residence of her mother and where her minor had gone to spend the weekend.

In the first investigations there were already clear indications that Olivia would have died after ingesting a large amount of medication that the mother would have obtained without difficulty in pharmacies as she had it prescribed for her mental health problems.

The death occurred a day after a judge granted custody to his father after a five-year judicial battle, with twenty complaints crossed between the couple. Noemí took the cruelest revenge against the ex-partner Cruel revenge of him with an ex-partner. He had already said that rather than hand her over to her father, he would rather kill her. The father’s defense, Eugenio García, wants to go all the way with the maximum sentence: permanent reviewable prison.