Malaga’s public prosecutor’s office calls for the disqualification of Almoguia’s former socialist mayor. Christopher Torreblanca. This petition is the sixth of seven lawsuits filed against Los Montes de Málaga city councilors over their urban planning management. I know until now … Five lawsuits have been filed against him, and the latest case could result in fines and disqualification. There’s still one more pending.
Malaga’s 10th Criminal Court this week reserved its verdict in the penultimate trial against the former mayor. urban crime Concerning licenses granted to companies building in this town. These documents were examined during Operation Almexia.
The investigation began with a complaint filed in July 2009 by a private security agency. The case was handled by Malaga’s 12th Investigative Court. On October 21, 2009, City Hall and the Cultural Center were raided for at least one body. 2 weeks worth of city planning files There may have been some irregularity during processing. The case was divided into nine separate parts.
Initially, the allegations focused on possible charges of pre-variation, but have since expanded to include bribery, document falsification, influence peddling, banning negotiations with public officials, and falsifying the prices of goods. The mayor at the time was He was a defendant in seven of these lawsuits.six of whom have already been indicted. Only one thing is missing.
In the first case he was prosecuted, he was found guilty by the Third Investigative Court in Málaga, but his sentence was annulled by the provincial court. The defense’s appeal was allowed. he was acquitted. Previous judicial proceedings investigated the granting of three permits, one in 2005 and two in 2008, for the purpose of building houses on land classified as non-developable.
In this case, these are buildings that cannot be legalized. According to the European Press Agency, the public prosecutor’s office maintains the charges against the city council member and the city architect, but calls for them to be applied. Mitigating unreasonable delay situations.
As such, the Ministry of Civil Service requested a six-month fine and imprisonment. Disqualified for 3 and a half years. Similarly, we dropped charges against the developer and architect of two single-family homes on non-developable land granted in 2008, and reached an agreement with another defendant who had obtained a permit for renovations and expansions on non-developable land in 2005.