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CRIME

Six police charged over drug addict’s murder

A judge believes six police officers from the Spanish city of Cartagena murdered a man who had called them for assistance, taking him to a remote cove and beating him before dumping his body in the sea.

Six police charged over drug addict's murder
According to the autopsy, the victim died due to a crushed spine and had flesh wounds caused near the time of death. File photo of a police car: Shutterstock

A judge in Cartagena, Murcia, sent six policemen to jail last week on suspicion of murdering a 44-year-old man who had called for help on the night of March 11th.

Diego Pérez Tomás, known to be a cocaine addict who suffered from schizophrenia, telephoned Cartagena police station at 9.39pm saying that a group of his neighbours in the Las Seiscientas” area of the city wanted to kill him over some stolen bicycles.

Later, as extracts from the judge’s report seen by ABC newspaper reveal, the night took a sinister turn.

After the dead man’s first phone call, a patrol went to visit Pérez at his home and tried to calm him down. However, at 4.39am Pérez called in again. He was incoherent and in an agitated state. The same police officers responded to the call, and Pérez was never seen alive again.

The agents have told their police interrogators that that they decided to take Pérez to Cala Cortina, a cove around two miles outside the city, in order to calm him down or in the words of one of those arrested, "to give him a fright".

The version of events as told by the six suspects holds that he ran away when they got to the beach, and that the reason the patrol cars left the scene only to return later on was due to their concern over Pérez’s whereabouts.

Investigators, who have had access to radio communications from the night of Pérez’s death, have also listened to testimony from a protected witness, who says that the six agents took Pérez to one of the patrol cars at which point one of them asked: “Are we taking him to the station?” His fellow agent replies: "No, we’re taking him to the lair".

"We’re bored, we’re playing hide and seek," said one of the officers over the radio when asked why there is so much activity around Cala Cortina that night.

At six in the morning, Pérez’s neighbours saw his door open with the lights on. His brother reported him as missing and Pérez’s body was eventually discovered floating in Cortina Cove on March 26th.

According to the autopsy, the victim died due to a crushed spine and had flesh wounds caused near the time of death. “The victim was already dead when his body entered the water,” the forensic report reads.

According to the judge, who has provisionally accused the six men, aged between 26 and 39, of illegal detention and murder, "it is probable that the detained man was beaten by one or several of the agents […] and that once death had resulted, they decided to get rid of the body by throwing it into sea by Cala Cortina".

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CRIME

Dutch gang leader vanishes in Spain after accidental release

A top drug trafficker is on the run after accidentally being bailed from jail in Spain, officials said Tuesday, dodging a bid to extradite him to the Netherlands where his Mocro Maffia gang is based.

Dutch gang leader vanishes in Spain after accidental release

Karim Bouyakhrichan was arrested in January in Marbella, an upmarket tourist resort on Spain’s southern coast, along with five other members of the Mocro Maffia gang.

They are suspected of having bought 172 properties in Spain worth over €50 million ($53.5 million) to launder their gains from drug trafficking.

But the following month a court in the southern city of Málaga decided to grant him provisional release with judicial supervision, against the wishes of public prosecutors and the Spanish government. Judicial sources said Tuesday his whereabouts are now unknown.

“It is worrying news,” Justice Félix Bolaños told a news conference following a weekly cabinet meeting when asked about the case.

“I can’t comment on any court decisions, but I do trust that the state security forces will bring this person to justice as soon as possible,” he added.

The Málaga court said in its ruling granting Bouyakhrichan provisional release that the risk that he would flee could be avoided “with other less burdensome security measures” than pre-trial detention.

It imposed bail of €50,000, took away his passport and ordered him to report to the authorities twice a month.

Dutch extradition bid

At the same time Spain’s top criminal court was processing a request for Bouyakhrichan’s extradition to the Netherlands, where he is wanted for large-scale drug trafficking.

But it postponed its extradition proceedings because the Málaga court intended to put Bouyakhrichan on trial first for money laundering, court sources told AFP.

When the Netherlands provided more information to back its extradition request, the top court summoned him to testify and when he failed to appear a fresh warrant for his arrest was issued.

Vincent Veenman, a spokesman at the Dutch public prosecutor’s office in The Hague, said it was “unknown” to them why Bouyakhrichan had not been detained for extradition.

“We are currently awaiting a decision on the extradition request,” he added.

“Our experience with the Spanish justice system is that this cooperation is generally good. Dozens of suspects are handed over every year.”

Bouyakhrichan’s brother Samir, another leading member of the Mocro Maffia, was murdered in 2014 near Marbella, sparking a reorganisation of organised crime groups in the region.

The Mocro Maffia made international headlines in 2022 after it emerged that Dutch Crown Princess Amalia had been placed under heavy protection in response to fears of an attack by the group.

Dutch media reported earlier last week that the 20-year-old heir to the Dutch throne studied in Madrid after being forced to ditch plans to live in student accommodation in Amsterdam because of the threats.

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