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Surveillance cameras place the detainees in the Barbate drug gang (Cádiz), according to the judge's order

BARBATE (CÁDIZ), Feb.

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Surveillance cameras place the detainees in the Barbate drug gang (Cádiz), according to the judge's order

BARBATE (CÁDIZ), Feb. 16 (EUROPA PRESS) -

The judge in charge of the case for the murder of two civil guards after they were run over by a drug boat last Friday in the port of Barbate (Cádiz) has confirmed in her order that the evidence collected with the port's security cameras, eyewitnesses and The red paint found on the boat points to those arrested in this case as the perpetrators of the attack.

According to the order issued by the judge of the Court of First Instance and Instruction number one of Barbate to which the program 'La Hora' on La 1 has had access, collected by Europa Press, the eight detainees admitted the crime of drug trafficking and that They were on the boat, but they accused another boat that was in the area of ​​being the one that rammed the Civil Guard zodiac, thus denying their involvement in the death of the two agents.

However, the evidence collected by eyewitnesses on the night of the attack determines that there were six drug boats in the port of Barbate but only one of them was the one belonging to the detainees, the large one with four engines and two white radar antennas on The stern.

The car also states that the agents were uniformed at that time and with the indicator light on, thus showing themselves as civil guards who were going to identify the six boats that were anchored in the port that night.

Thus, it is stated in the document that, according to witnesses, it is this boat that approached the zodiac "violently", attacking it "on two occasions at high speed", and that the crew members were wearing waterproof clothing. and helmets and that the one who was steering the boat was wearing a red jacket.

After running over them, the drug boat fled the area, in a police chase that lasted 16 hours until all those allegedly involved were finally arrested on Saturday morning. During those hours, the drug trafficker made several stops, a first near the Alcadeisa beach, in La Línea de la Concepción, and later disembarked three crew members in the port of Sotogrande, in San Roque. These were the first arrested on Friday night by the device set up by the Civil Guard.

The other three crew members, including the one driving the drug boat, known as Kiko 'El Cabra', continued by sea until they reached the Línea de la Concepción beach, where they fled on foot. According to the car, when these three suspects were detained, their clothes were wet and one of them was wearing a red coat, a fact that coincides with what was stated by witnesses at the port. In addition, the arresting agents smelled a strong smell of gasoline on them.

The detainees acknowledged in their statement before the judge the facts exposed from the moment they left the port of Barbate, although they denied that they offered resistance at the time of arrest, "despite the fact that it appears in the Civil Guard report."

They also acknowledged the crime of smuggling, but denied that their boat was the one that caused the death of the two civil guards, "attributing it to another four-engine boat that they also say was at the scene."

Last Monday, the Court of First Instance and Instruction number 1 of Barbate, acting as guard, ordered, at the request of the Prosecutor's Office and the private prosecution carried out by the Unified Association of Civil Guards (AUGC), the entry into provisional prison, communicated and without bail for the six crew members of the drug boat.

Each of these six detainees is being investigated for two crimes of murder, four crimes of attempted murder, six crimes of aggravated attack, one crime of smuggling and one crime of serious resistance to a law enforcement agent.

The other two individuals, who were arrested when they were going to pick up the six crew members in Sotogrande with a vehicle, were released provisionally after giving a statement before the judicial authority and with the obligation to appear in court on the 1st of each month. These two detainees are being investigated for alleged crimes of concealment and resistance to a law enforcement agent.

The deceased agents are Miguel Ángel González Gómez, 39 years old, a native of the Cadiz municipality of San Fernando, member of the Group of Underwater Activities Specialists (GEAS), with a partner and a daughter; and David Pérez Carracedo, 43 years old, native of Barcelona, ​​member of the Rapid Action Group (GAR), with a wife and two children.

It is also worth remembering that this Friday the Provincial Prosecutor's Office of Cádiz has agreed to open a criminal investigation to identify the authors who used expressions and messages cheering the drug traffickers who were run over by the civil guards with their boat and which were recorded in videos that were uploaded to social networks.