Romina Celeste's husband, the young woman who has been missing in Costa Teguise since New Year's Day, has stated that "it is not the first time she has disappeared" and maintains that this is why he did not report the events until a week later, when he learned that his wife had not contacted her family either. "Then I got alarmed," he said in statements to La Voz.
"It is not the first time she has disappeared from me and what I understood is that she has blocked me from all forms of communication and that she had left," said Romina Celeste's husband, who assured that in September the young woman left home for more than 20 days.
The young woman's partner, who did not want his name to be made public, has also denied that it was an argument that he had with his wife in the early hours of January 1. According to his account, Romina "had been asking" him for "money" for "days" to "be able to bring her son", whom he claims had not gone on vacation in December but has been in Paraguay with his grandparents "since August". "To avoid an argument is why I leave the house around 5 or 6 in the morning", he pointed out.
Romina's husband has stated that he did not return to the house until "two or three in the afternoon" on New Year's Day and that when he arrived she was no longer there. "And most of her clothes and a black travel backpack were also missing. Her toiletries were also missing and her cell phone and my personal cell phone were also missing," said the young woman's spouse, who also pointed out that "some cash that was in the house" was missing. "And I called her, sent messages to my cell phone, to hers and she didn't answer me," said Romina's husband, pointing out that this is how he understood that the young woman "had left."
"It is very strange that she has not contacted her family"
"Until the 7th I have no knowledge that she had not spoken to her family either and that is when I really get alarmed," he related. "Because she may have left me, okay, but I find it very strange that she has not contacted her family since the 31st in the morning, according to what they told me," added Romina's husband, who pointed out that "she would talk to her family every day or every two or three days at most."
Thus, during the afternoon of the 7th, Romina's husband claims that he was calling acquaintances to see if they knew anything about his wife and that, after seeing that "no one had seen her", it was when on the morning of the 8th he decided to report her disappearance to the Civil Guard.









