Mea culpa S1E8x8

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Transcript
00:00I've seen you in interviews, in magazines, I have copies of the newspapers and the press, you were reading them before.
00:05What are you going to say in that interview, if all the facts accuse you?
00:09You had a bicycle in your possession, you bought it and it was the bicycle that the person you killed had, and that you threw into the San Juan de la Aguada.
00:17That's what the magistrate told me, that he was really innocent.
00:22Did you have any jewels, Mr. Jose?
00:24I bought those jewels.
00:25Ok, you had jewels.
00:26But one day I was here in front of my wife and I told her, why do you need my wife, she has other jewels.
00:31And why do we need you to buy jewels, I sold them.
00:34I sold them.
00:36And then they told me that those jewels were from the people who were here.
00:43Can you explain to me, Mr. Jose, what did the knife with which you saw the death of the cousin of one of the jurors do to you?
00:51Can you explain one thing to me?
00:53That knife that you found, did you buy it also to peel potatoes?
00:56That knife was not mine, it was my wife's, my wife works peeling potatoes at home.
01:01That knife was taken from my wife's house.
01:04Everything that has happened to you has been a sequel to fatalities and facts that have been condemning you and that are going to rot you here in prison as an innocent person.
01:11That's what you're telling me, right?
01:13And that's why I've been complaining about what happened.
01:16I've complained to the President of the Republic, I've complained to the Minister of Justice and I have photocopies.
01:20But the way you're asking me these things is making me feel like a child.
01:23And the spectator today is not to say that things are as naive as you ask them.
01:29You, by chance, are guilty of a murder, by chance you spend nine years,
01:33by chance you happen to sell a bicycle, and because you feel sorry for your wife, you buy some jewels.
01:39And then, because you felt sorry for your wife too, you decide to sign the perpetual sentence forever for having been a rapist.
01:48It's not my fault, I'm denying it.
01:51I, of course, filmed it, and that's why the mistake I made in filming it.
01:58Don José Vázquez, you spent nine years in prison, serving a sentence for robbery,
02:04intimidation and moral offense.
02:07No, not moral offense.
02:09That's what the court says.
02:10No, it's a moral offense of the Constitution.
02:12That's part of the Molina case.
02:17You were in prison for robbery and intimidation.
02:20With violence.
02:21With violence.
02:22What kind of violence?
02:23It's not violence when you hit a person.
02:32Do you mind if I ask you something else?
02:34No, it doesn't bother me at all.
02:38Is it the same as saying you're guilty?
02:40It's the same, because I'm not guilty, I don't have to be offended.
02:48If I were guilty, I would say, of course, I'm guilty of what I did.
02:51I'm speaking the truth.
02:52If I were to be found guilty of what I did, for disrespect,
02:56I would receive a sentence for disrespect.
02:59But not for the injustice that I have committed, that I have been sentenced to receive respect.
03:03I was sentenced to receive respect for 15 years and 20 years for a robbery.
03:10And I already knew that I was going to do more than what you named me.
03:16There are two, there are two.
03:17You didn't name me Terena.
03:18There are two.
03:19There are two people who sentenced me to receive respect.
03:23And more for the injustice that I have been sentenced to receive respect.
03:34TARCA JOSÉ VÁZQUEZ
03:41José Vázquez, prior to the rapes, was sentenced for robbery and offences against morals.
03:48He is also accused of raping a religious woman and committing dishonest abuses with a minor.
03:55In February of this year, he was transferred to the Tarca prison to be sentenced.
04:02According to studies of the SEMNAM, 9 out of 10 rapes are not reported.
04:20You have already seen it.
04:21A really shocking case.
04:24First, it is shocking because of the crime we are talking about.
04:27It is a sexual crime of extreme severity, rape.
04:30And on the other hand, it is shocking because of the tremendous pain that the victims have to endure,
04:34who have been affected by it.
04:37We are going to talk about all of this right now in our Mediaculp.
04:41I am going to welcome and introduce our guests.
04:44We are joined by Professor Andrés Domínguez, who is a professor at the Superior Research Institute.
04:49Dr. Giorgio Agostini, who is a professor at the Superior Research Institute, is also with us.
04:55As always, we have Carlos Pinto with us.
04:59And we have a very interested guest to talk about this important topic.
05:05This is Lieutenant General Georgina Cáceres, who works in the Prefecture of Minors,
05:10in the Control and Prevention Section of Sexual Crimes.
05:13Lieutenant, thank you very much for being with us.
05:15We believe that your contribution will be really important for this program.
05:19And let's get to the point.
05:22Giorgio, I would like to start with the topic of Mediaculp.
05:25In this case, it has an impact because it is the first time in all of these seven programs
05:29that we have been watching that a man who has committed a crime does not recognize his guilt.
05:34What do you attribute it to?
05:36I would say, first, that we are very impacted as a public in general,
05:39including as a professional, that at some point we have had to see some of these people's victims.
05:44In the second term, indeed, this person, due to all the social stigmatization that exists,
05:50finds it very difficult to recognize his guilt.