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CRIME

Nursing home killer lands 127-year sentence

A judge on Friday handed a former security guard at a Spanish retirement home 127 years in prison for the murder of 11 elderly residents. He was also ordered to pay large fines to the families of his victims.

Nursing home killer lands 127-year sentence
Joan Vila Dilme said he murdered the old people to "end their suffering". Photo: YouTube

Joan Vila Dilme, dubbed "the angel of death", was found guilty on June 11th by a unanimous jury decision at a court hearing in the northeast Spanish town of Girona.

Prosecutors had originally wanted a 194-year jail term for the 45-year-old.

On Friday, however, the judge presiding over the case settled on a 127-year sentence for the killer.

He will serve a maximum of 40 years, Spain's La Vanguardia newspaper reported, also on Friday.

Vila Dilme will also have to pay fines of €369.000 ($490,000) to the families of his victims.

In his sentence, the Judge said it had been proven to Vial Dilme administered descaling acid, bleach and drugs to his victims.

The result had been "extraordinary suffering" and then death.

The court also said that Vila Dilme had acted in a premeditated fashion and "wanted to kill" his victims.

Reading out his statement, the judge also dismissed defence lawyer claims that the killer had been suffering from mental problems which "could have prevented him for understanding his actions".

Vila Dilme, a security guard at the La Caritat home in Olot, in Spain's Catalonia region, was arrested in October 2010 after the death of an 85-year-old woman in a local hospital.

He later confessed to her murder, saying he had made her drink bleach.

He also owned up to the murder of two other elderly people, which he said were carried out in order to "end their suffering".

Eight other murders, committed between August 2009 and October 2010, later came to light, with the victims given overdoses of insulin or various fatal pharmaceutical cocktails in a case which has stirred high emotions in the country.

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CRIME

Pensioner letter bomb suspect goes on trial in Spain

A pensioner who allegedly sent letter bombs to Spain's prime minister and the US and Ukrainian embassies in 2022 went on trial Monday, facing 22 years behind bars if convicted.

Pensioner letter bomb suspect goes on trial in Spain

Pompeyo González Pascual, a man in his mid-70s from northern Spain, is facing charges of terrorism and manufacturing explosives for sending letter bombs to six addresses in late 2022.

Gonzalez Pascual listened as the charges were read out at Madrid’s Audiencia Nacional, Spain’s top criminal court.

The trial will run until Thursday.

According to the indictment, the suspect was opposed to Madrid and Washington’s support for Ukraine following Russia’s February 2022 invasion and “sought to change those positions and cause a profound upheaval in Spanish society”.

The devices were sent to Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, Defence Minister Margarita Robles, the US and Ukrainian embassies, a Spanish arms firm that makes grenades donated to Ukraine and a major Spanish military base.

A Ukrainian embassy staffer sustained light injuries while opening one of the packages. The other packages were intercepted by security staff.

An expert who examined his computer told the court they found evidence of “searches for how to prepare explosive devices” and of his visiting “media propaganda channels related to the Russia-Ukraine conflict”.

Gonzalez Pascual was arrested in January 2023 and put in pre-trial detention but a judge granted him conditional release last month on grounds he wasn’t in a position to destroy evidence or likely to reoffend, and had no previous convictions.

At the time, the judge said there were “no indications” he had acted in conjunction with “any organised terror group”.

His arrest came after a New York Times report said US and European investigators believed Russian military intelligence officers had “directed” associates of a Russia-based white supremacist group to carry out the Spain campaign.

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