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The highest authority of the uniformed police badured the Senate Human Rights Commission that "the institution is not sent alone" and that it will collaborate with what justice will determine.
On Monday, Carabinier general manager Hermes Soto attended the Senate Human Rights Commission, where he again answered questions about the operation that ended. by the crime of Camilo Catrillanca, Wednesday, November 14, at the end of the trial. Last week, I attended the Security Committee of the Chamber of Deputies and revealed that Sergeant Raúl Ávila, one of the soldiers who had recorded the operation and who would have shot at the tractor in which the young driver drove Mapuche, had destroyed his camera card because he had personal videos with his partner,
. Now, Soto was further detailing the fate of the memory card, which can be vital as evidence to clarify the facts. Soto confirmed that the money had been cleared of the card. "He kept his card in his possession and broke it later and made it disappear in the toilets of his house or elsewhere," he said.
Soto emphasized the commitment of the police in matters of justice and in this sense. He badured that they would take all appropriate measures to punish the people involved. It should be mentioned that four NCOs were dismissed while a colonel and a general resigned from the institution after these events.
"If we have to correct, we correct, if we have to punish, we punish and have to put them at our disposal, the courts, we will do it," said Soto. The general was finally careful to point out that "the institution is not sent alone" and that it will not withdraw the quota that it has prepared for the Araucanian region. .
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