Alberto Pérez, the former chief of staff of the Buenos Aires governor Daniel Scioli, assured this Saturday that together with his legal representatives “he will go in depth and with the Constitution in hand” in the case in which the formation of a Buenos Aires judicial table during the administration of María Eugenia Vidal in that district.
“We are going to go all the way with the Constitution in hand so that these things do not happen again,” Pérez warned this morning in a report given to AM 750.
The former official maintained that “the armed causes of which we were victims had the purpose of silencing the voice of the opposition at that time and taking away our legitimacy.”
“There is no doubt that the persecution of the national government of Mauricio Macri and the provincial government of María Eugenia Vidal of the current ambassador to Brazil, Daniel Scioli, and of the former president and current vice president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, aimed at discrediting us,” he said.
In the same way, he added that it was an event that “never happened in a democracy” and that the former officials under investigation “violated the intelligence law” something that “is clear from the video of (former Labor Minister Marcelo) Villegas, and the audio of commissioner (Hernán) Cassasa,” he added.
Commissioner Hernán Cassasa confirmed on the 13th of this month to the legislators of the Bicameral Intelligence Subcommittee of Congress that the audios in which he mentions the actions of the macrista “judicial table” are his authorship.
In these records, the police officer details who were the former officials who were part of it with the aim of harming union leaders, which complicates the situation of former Governor Vidal.
Cassasa, current commissioner of the Buenos Aires Police and deputy commissioner in 2017, declared before the members of that working group, made up of the deputies of the Frente de Todos Rodolfo Tailhade and Eduardo Valdés, and the legislator of Together for Change Miguel Angel Bazze.
Meanwhile, Pérez added this Saturday that the “delegitimization that the macrismo armed” was carried out “so that we could not raise our voices and say that what was really being done, that it was a brutal adjustment on the workers.”
“How was society going to listen to our voice if we had to explain every day the armed causes of which we were victims?” he asked.
Likewise, he considered that the march on February 1 scheduled for 6:00 p.m. at the headquarters of the Palace of Courts against lawfare, which is called by different organizations, “is going to serve because what we are looking for is that justice works as it should.”
“When justice did not work, it was often the mobilization of peaceful, massive society that prevailed,” he recalled at the end of the interview.