The Civil Guard is investigating the authenticity of "all the documentation" submitted to the Yaiza City Council by Natanael Cabrera, the Civil Protection volunteer who has already been charged with an alleged crime of document forgery. Thus, in addition to the proceedings for having submitted a driver's license that, according to police investigations, could be false, and which are already in the hands of the Court, there is now a second investigation. In this case, as the Civil Guard has confirmed to La Voz, the agents have initiated the investigation "ex officio" and in an "expanded" manner of that first investigation, which stemmed from the complaint of the San Borondón councilor Juan Monzón.
According to the Councilor for Citizen Security of Yaiza, Javier Camacho, to La Voz, among the documentation submitted by this member of Civil Protection are a high school diploma and another from the higher cycle of ambulance technician, in addition to a driver's license that, according to the Civil Guard, the DGT confirmed that he lacked. But there could be even more documents whose authenticity is yet to be confirmed. "He submitted many documents. He submitted several more, but I don't remember them all," Camacho pointed out, who stressed that the City Council handed over the "folder" with Cabrera's documentation to the Civil Guard "on the fly", when the police force requested them.
The Civil Guard has not specified which documents are the subject of their investigation, but they do indicate that they are investigating "all" those that this young man "submitted to the agency". According to them, they are "waiting" for "the competent body to confirm the veracity" of these titles. Once they have the results, the agents will report them to the Court.
Doing "practically the same" in other city councils
After learning that he was being investigated for the alleged falsification of his driver's license, the City Council announced that Natanael Cabrera had been removed from his "responsibilities", after the confirmation by the DGT that he "lacked a driver's license". Thus, Cabrera, who when San Borondón publicly denounced that he could be driving official vehicles without a license, even announced that he would sue the party, resigned from his position on March 30. Among his responsibilities, Camacho has indicated that he served as "head of prevention".
The councilor has pointed out, however, that he did not receive remuneration for that position and that Cabrera has not received "any type of salary" at "any time" from the City Council. "Neither he nor anyone," he stressed, reiterating the statements of the City Council, which has referred to him in all its previous communications as "volunteer". In this way, the councilor has indicated that being part of the Civil Protection group implies accessing "altruistically" to that position of "volunteer".
In addition, the councilor assures that this young man would have already done "practically the same" in other city councils, in which he would have been "performing this work, driving official cars and so on". "So it's not in this City Council, it comes from other City Councils," he assured. Javier Camacho has referred specifically to Tías, alluding to "other opposition parties, which in their day also governed and led Civil Protection" in that municipality (in clear reference to San Borondón) and where, according to him, Cabrera "also did the same".
"Between one thing and another, you investigate and investigate and in the end it's incredible because, of course, you don't give credit," he acknowledged. According to him, in his case it was not until the arrival of that "Traffic report" when he began to give "credit" to those complaints that San Borondón had been making, and that the party finally chose to transfer to the Civil Guard, and remove him from the Civil Protection group.