Post by account_disabled on Jan 29, 2024 4:41:54 GMT
leaving him under house arrest in his house in the La Dehesa neighborhood. Once again his defense opted to invoke health problems. In mid-2001, at the age of 87 and while he was admitted to the Military Hospital, the Court of Appeals of Santiago decided to temporarily suspend the case for health reasons. A year later, the Supreme Court would rule on the definitive dismissal of the case due to vascular dementia. It seems certain that he suffered from subcortical dementia of vascular origin . But, if it was subcortical it did not affect the noble functions of the brain, which are in the cortex; If it was subcortical, it affected only movements, influencing motor behavior, therefore it was perfectly processable. He died at the age of 91 at 2:15 p.m. on December 10, 2006, International Human Rights Day. But Pinochet makes a serious mistake.
In an interview conducted by his youngest daughter, Jacqueline , to a Miami television channel, it was shown that he was lucid: “Who do I ask for forgiveness? About what? That they once tried to murder me in Cajón del Phone Number Database Maipo? Sorry that we were going to transform into another Cuba? No, they have to ask me for forgiveness,” Pinochet will say in the interview. New cases were opened there . He had already resigned from the Senate, but still had privileges as former president. That is why in mid-2004 the Supreme Court removed him again, this time for “Operation Condor” and a few days later Judge Guzmán interrogated him again. But the appeals court again reverses the prosecution. The decline of the dictatorship: from protests to plebiscite On his 90th birthday, Pinochet was under house arrest in his home in La Dehesa for another human rights case.
When he died, he was being prosecuted for Villa Grimaldi, Operation Colombo, another episode of the Caravan of Death, the murder of the chemist Eugenio Berríos , the execution of the Spanish priest Antonio Llidó and the Riggs case , which revealed a corruption scheme and illicit enrichment of the former dictator and his family. THE GENERAL'S ACCOUNTS AT RIGGS BANK JGM and GM Pinochet's most corrupt profile was discovered by chance. As a consequence of the attack on the Twin Towers, on September 11, 2001, the United States enacted new laws to pursue the international financing of terrorist groups, lifting banking secrecy. The first indications led to suspicious movements being observed at Riggs Bank and on July 14, 2004, “The Washington Post” reported the discovery of 125 Pinochet's secret accounts, for a total of $27 million.
In an interview conducted by his youngest daughter, Jacqueline , to a Miami television channel, it was shown that he was lucid: “Who do I ask for forgiveness? About what? That they once tried to murder me in Cajón del Phone Number Database Maipo? Sorry that we were going to transform into another Cuba? No, they have to ask me for forgiveness,” Pinochet will say in the interview. New cases were opened there . He had already resigned from the Senate, but still had privileges as former president. That is why in mid-2004 the Supreme Court removed him again, this time for “Operation Condor” and a few days later Judge Guzmán interrogated him again. But the appeals court again reverses the prosecution. The decline of the dictatorship: from protests to plebiscite On his 90th birthday, Pinochet was under house arrest in his home in La Dehesa for another human rights case.
When he died, he was being prosecuted for Villa Grimaldi, Operation Colombo, another episode of the Caravan of Death, the murder of the chemist Eugenio Berríos , the execution of the Spanish priest Antonio Llidó and the Riggs case , which revealed a corruption scheme and illicit enrichment of the former dictator and his family. THE GENERAL'S ACCOUNTS AT RIGGS BANK JGM and GM Pinochet's most corrupt profile was discovered by chance. As a consequence of the attack on the Twin Towers, on September 11, 2001, the United States enacted new laws to pursue the international financing of terrorist groups, lifting banking secrecy. The first indications led to suspicious movements being observed at Riggs Bank and on July 14, 2004, “The Washington Post” reported the discovery of 125 Pinochet's secret accounts, for a total of $27 million.