• 2 days ago
En un impactante caso en Merlo, Buenos Aires, Tobias, el asesino del chofer de Didi Leandro Giménez, publicó un video desde la cárcel burlándose de su víctima. Este incidente ha generado una ola de indignación pública y cuestionamientos sobre el uso de celulares en prisiones. A pesar de las restricciones oficiales, muchos presos tienen acceso a dispositivos móviles, lo que facilita actividades delictivas como secuestros virtuales y extorsiones.

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00:00We showed you what had happened with the case of Leandro Jiménez, a Didi driver.
00:06What happens? His killer uploads a video saying,
00:12I'm better than the dead.
00:14Look at it.
00:16I'm better than the dead.
00:18I'm better than the dead.
00:20I'm better than the dead.
00:22I'm better than the dead.
00:24I'm better than the dead.
00:26I'm better than the dead.
00:28I'm better than the dead.
00:32I'm better than the dead.
00:34I'm better than the dead.
00:36I'm better than the dead.
00:38At the end, you can see,
00:40the video is looped,
00:42but let's see if we can stop the capture.
00:44There is a capture with emoticons.
00:46There it is.
00:48It says, so much pain,
00:50suddenly they never activated Piola.
00:52I don't know what he's trying to say.
00:54Well, I'm a real thief, he's saying.
00:56And in another,
00:58there is this one that says,
01:00we are better than the dead.
01:02This is the post that yesterday
01:04made a mother cry
01:06in a march and said,
01:08my grandson started the first grade,
01:10my son lost the dream of his life
01:12of taking him to the first grade,
01:14and on top of that,
01:16the killer laughs at us
01:18because he is putting
01:20I'm better than the dead.
01:22This is the part that no one can understand
01:24how they are allowed to have social networks.
01:26This boy, Tobias,
01:28is a 19-year-old boy,
01:30that's why he's in jail,
01:32because we already know what happens
01:34with justice regarding minors,
01:36and he is Leandro's killer.
01:38Look at the emoticon of the little angel.
01:40That is, when he laughs at the dead,
01:42you can see it there,
01:44no trace, it says a video, he laughs.
01:46The emoticon, what it says,
01:48what it communicates is an emotion.
01:50Here we are better than him,
01:52the little angel, and he also laughs.
01:54This clearly puts any of us
01:56who are outside
01:58seeing this impunity.
02:00I was wondering where cell phones are allowed
02:02and where not.
02:04Some lawyers told me,
02:06they are not allowed now
02:08in the Federal Penitentiary Service,
02:10they are not allowed in the city of Buenos Aires,
02:12we can discuss it,
02:14because we have already seen
02:16that there is so much escape
02:18and there are also prisoners with cell phones,
02:20the situation in the province of Buenos Aires is very relaxed.
02:22This case, the case of the Queen,
02:24is in Merlo, that is, in the province of Buenos Aires.
02:26Well, but one thing is the cell phone
02:28that is born and arrives in times of pandemic
02:30so that criminals,
02:32prisoners, have communication
02:34with their families, that is a right,
02:36that communication exists,
02:38but after the pandemic,
02:40that cell phone
02:42had to be withdrawn.
02:44But suppose not.
02:46If you see that they are laughing at the victim
02:48how can that not be a reason
02:50for them to withdraw the cell phone?
02:52Because to the Queen they take out the cell phone
02:54to violate the security measures.
02:56First, because it came out on television.
02:58And second, because it violated the criminal security measures.
03:00In fact, we showed
03:02and as we were showing the videos of this woman,
03:04they said, ah, you are in America,
03:06ah, you are 24 years old.
03:08Well, let's see, the truth is that in the province of Buenos Aires
03:10there are 43,000 detainees, 75%
03:12have access to at least one line.
03:14One line, I say, because there are many cases
03:16where you do not have, of course.
03:18There are a number of cell phones in white.
03:20We know that the prisoners have a lot of cell phones
03:22that are not in white,
03:24they do not register them.
03:26And what we see here,
03:28that some take it as sympathetically,
03:30the truth is that behind those cell phones
03:32there are also many crimes that are carried out,
03:34virtual kidnappings,
03:36there are tutorials for trafficking.
03:38Well, a report, at the time, the Procunar,
03:40the Prosecutor's Office of Anti-Narcotrafficking,
03:42made a report, it was about a year and a half,
03:44where it said that at least
03:4660 gangs
03:48had organized from prison
03:50crimes linked to drug trafficking
03:52and homicides,
03:54from federal prisons in different parts of the country.
03:56Not to mention virtual kidnappings,
03:58also evidence that it has been used
04:00for pedophilia.
04:02Telephones that appear there, of course,
04:04are not the ones that are being registered.
04:06One more, one more,
04:08that get into, for example, dating apps,
04:10chat, when they discover
04:12maybe a person, for example,
04:14who is engaged, but who is chatting
04:16on the other side, they ask for photos
04:18and extort him. There are many things
04:20that are happening. Do you want to see
04:22another video? Let's see.
04:34It's the dance.
04:36There are situations
04:38where they get
04:40into fights.
04:42It's the problem that we have,
04:44people, to say,
04:46what's going on inside the prison.
04:48Really, one, because
04:50each prisoner gets a lot of money.
04:5283 thousand pesos a day
04:54goes to the country.
04:56Look, in the prison of Virrey del Pino,
04:58I want you to hear it.
05:00I want you to listen to the audio
05:02and then you have
05:04your own opinions. Let's open the audio
05:06to hear what these guys are saying
05:08in the prison of Virrey del Pino.
05:14Yes, everyone making
05:16the gesture of the weapon.
05:20And I wonder what happens
05:22with those who are on the other side
05:24and lost a relative and see this.
05:26And all the time they make you
05:28the gesture of the revolver.
05:30They don't look very
05:32sorry for what they did.
05:34Let's go back to how much
05:36goes to the country,
05:38to Argentina, each prisoner.
05:40Each prisoner gets more than 83 thousand pesos.
05:42It's a number.
05:44Per day.
05:46In the city of Buenos Aires, which of course
05:48is an average of what we are talking about in the country.
05:50And let's see, numbers that hurt.
05:52Let's talk about numbers that hurt.
05:54Clara, you bring a number that really
05:56is a bomb.
05:58It's very painful.
06:00Yes, currently
06:02what he earns in salary,
06:04in remuneration,
06:06a prisoner who works
06:08is superior to what he earns,
06:10for example, or what he charges
06:12a minimum salary.
06:14Because the prisoner
06:16if he decides to work,
06:18charges the equivalent
06:20to a minimum living and mobile salary
06:22which is 296 thousand pesos
06:24in the month of March,
06:26296 thousand 832 pesos.
06:28And in March
06:30the minimum salary
06:32is 279 thousand
06:34121 pesos.
06:36But there is more.
06:38They have the right to work,
06:40yes. What they are paid
06:42is remunerated, yes.
06:44This means that they have retentions.
06:46Retentions, for example, for social security.
06:48This, tomorrow,
06:50gives the right
06:52to a retirement.
06:54And this is the current reality
06:56of the subject of the prisoner.
06:58And I tell you,
07:00when they notice and say that he works,
07:02who controls that he works?
07:04We don't see many work videos.
07:06What I say is,
07:08we can do a lot of politics
07:10showing Bukele
07:12and saying that we are the same,
07:14but imagine Bukele
07:16if he comes to see the video of the Queen.
07:18He grabs his head, right?
07:20You talk about salary,
07:22but I also tell you
07:24that what they earn,
07:26for example, by promoting betting houses,
07:28by selling clothing,
07:30even with these videos
07:32that are promoted.
07:34These are like the jobs, if you want,
07:36that each one has.
07:38But those who are outside say,
07:40but listen, this guy is in prison
07:42and earns more money than me,
07:44that I am working every day
07:4612, 14 hours.
07:48And apart, there is something that causes indignation.
07:50One says, the prisoner
07:52has remuneration
07:54or has a remunerated salary
07:56and decides or wants to work.
07:58There are people that our prison
08:00is outside the prisons
08:02and wants to work
08:04and does not get a job.
08:06Or wants to work and gets,
08:08but does not get a remunerated salary.
08:10The salary of the prisoners is with Aguinaldo.
08:12Aguinaldo, holidays,
08:14retirement.
08:16Look at how many cases,
08:18sorry, look at how many cases
08:20in the last year
08:22of security personnel
08:24that are having to work
08:26in the apps to make one more deal.
08:28Meanwhile,
08:30the guys inside...
08:32Let's say that this salary
08:34of 296,832
08:36they do not have to spend
08:38not even in viaticos.
08:40Let's say that the food is bad,
08:42the food of the prison is very bad
08:44and they buy their food.
08:46But in viaticos they do not spend.
08:48And from what we see,
08:50they have a good level of internet.
08:52They provide food to the children.
08:54They have a 35% retention.
08:56But of that remuneration
08:58that they earn,
09:0030% goes to a fund
09:02so that they can get money
09:04the day they get out of prison.
09:06So that they have a reserve fund.

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