Prosecutors Want CFK Transferred From House Arrest to Prison
25 Articles
25 Articles
Prosecutors want CFK transferred from house arrest to prison
Prosecutors Diego Luciani and Sergio Mola, who got former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner (CFK) sentenced to six years in jail for corruption in the so-called Vialidad Case, on Monday filed for her to be stripped of her house arrest privileges and be sent to an ordinary correctional facility.
This Monday, the prosecution of the Road Case, for which former Argentine president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner was sentenced to six years in prison, has appealed the decision of the Justice to grant her the benefit of serving the sentence at her home. Instead, she asks that the former head of State be transferred to a traditional prison. She had been granted this permission for having been more than 70 years old. Two weeks ago, former presid…
Prosecutors Luciani and Mola objected to the arrest of the former president in her department and asked that she “continue serving the prison sentence imposed on her in a prison unit”
The Argentine Prosecutor's Office appealed this Monday the measure allowing former President Cristina Fernández to serve her six-year sentence for corruption under house arrest. Prosecutors Diego Luciani and Sergio Mola described the decision as "yet another blunder" and an "undue privilege" for the former president. Representatives of the Public Prosecutor's Office had previously requested that this measure not be granted to Fernández. Accordin…
Prosecutors Diego Luciani and Sergio Mola appealed this Monday the house arrest granted to former President Cristina Kirchner in the so-called "Roads Case," and the final decision will now be left to the Federal Court of Cassation. In a 33-page brief, the prosecutors request that "Cristina Elizabet Fernández's house arrest be revoked so that she can continue serving the prison sentence imposed on her in a prison," according to the text obtained …
The prosecutor said she respected the protests, but clarified that the sentence was based on evidence and that there are still legal avenues if there is disagreement.
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