During an interview on the program “Informal Desayunos” on channel 12, the Colorado legislator defended the articles of the Urgent Consideration Law (LUC) that the left and the PIT-CNT intend to repeal, including the one referring to the reduction of time limits. for evictions and legitimate defense.
At one point in the interview, the journalist said that a person who is late in paying the rent may not be a stubborn debtor and may have fallen behind due to specific economic problems. Before which, Zubía said that “the offender is not always stubborn,” the journalist retorted that they are two different things, but the legislator reproached him for not.
Zubía added: “You have a bad day tomorrow, I hope it doesn’t happen to you, and you end up committing a crime. In my experience of 40 years, no less, whoever says: ‘I am not going to commit a crime’, is a liar. We can all commit a crime ”.
Given this assertion, one of the journalists of the program disagreed with the expressions of the former prosecutor, and questioned that it would not occur to her to kill a person, because she had a bad day.
“When they rape her, her life is not at risk”
Another of the high points occurred when the journalists of the program rejected the use of a firearm when the life of the person who has the weapon is no longer at risk. Faced with this, Zubía asked: “Does my life only have to be at risk for me to defend myself from a violation?” And added: “You speak to me from common sense and I speak to you about the legal elements. When they rape her, her life is not at risk ”.
Such assertion generated the rejection of the journalist who told her: “How can my life not be at risk if they are raping me? Don’t you know that rape can end in death?
But Zubía -the same one who in July 2018 brought a firearm to a Diamante FM radio program and placed it on the interview table-, said that the Penal Code of 1934 establishes that “many rights in addition to life can be defended with violence.”
The journalist refused to compare the rape with the theft of a car and the legislator stated that “for the theft of a car he goes to prison and for a violation he also goes to prison.” He also asked the journalist: What is worse, rape or murder? The communicator replied that “both things are horrible”, but to Zubía it seemed a “politically correct answer.”