Spanish policemen Face Prison For 'Torturing' 2 Britons
Four members of the Spanish police are on trial facing long
prison sentences for allegedly torturing two British holidaymakers while in
custody.
Public prosecutors in Majorca are pressing for a combined 26
year sentence for a captain and three officers of Spain’s Civil Guard who are
said to have intimidated and brutally attacked the two detainees in 2009.
The two Brits were arrested after a pub brawl on the
Balearic island during which one of them allegedly knocked out the off-duty
sergeant, Spain's El País newspaper reported on Tuesday.
Once taken back to the custody suite, prosecutors say the
three men under his command, and the sergeant himself then intimidated and
brutally attacked the detainees.
The Brits were then purportedly beaten with a truncheon and
bare fists and were also humiliated. Both sustained arm fractures, bruising and
facial injures and had to be taken to hospital twice during the night of their
arrest.
The sergeant is also accused of psychological torture,
allegedly staring at one of the captive men inside the cell until he left him
‘in a state of panic’.
Yet the Civil Guard captain denied his officers had
inflected the injuries and argued they had been caused by other officers during
the men's arrest, or were self-inflicted.
He claimed that one of the detainees had hurt themselves
inside their cell and during their arrest. He added that one of the men
momentarily escaped from the patrol car while in handcuffs, and fell and hit
his face.
But internal investigators rejected this version of events,
saying the injuries sustained had been too severe.
The defence is denying the assertions, noting that both the
men were absent from court and claiming that one of them is a known drug
trafficker who knew he was under investigation.
The Civil Guards also filed their own complaint against the
Brits, who were found guilty of assault and disobedience.
The captain is now facing 11 years in prison while the three
officers under his command each facing sentences of five years.
One of the Brits continued to suffer psychological problems
in the wake of the incident, a psychotherapist told the court.
Majorca prosecutor Julio Cano said: “Trust in the right to a
defence is abolished if one cannot trust in the actions of the police.
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