CONTRIBUTED THE LOCAL POLICE REPORT STATING THAT HE "LACKS" A LICENSE

Monzón reported the alleged lack of a driver's license of the Yaiza volunteer to the Civil Guard

The councilman from San Borondón contributed the Local Police report stating that the Civil Protection member "lacks" a driver's license. He questions the actions of the City Council, which sent the volunteer's alleged valid license to the media "without verifying"...

March 28 2016 (13:19 WEST)
Monzón reported the alleged lack of a driver's license of the Yaiza volunteer to the Civil Guard
Monzón reported the alleged lack of a driver's license of the Yaiza volunteer to the Civil Guard

San Borondón filed a complaint with the Civil Guard on March 17 to "bring to their attention" the alleged lack of a driver's license of a Civil Protection volunteer from Yaiza who was driving official vehicles, so that the police force "acts" if necessary. The party based this on a report from the Local Police of the municipality dated February 26, in which it is stated that this person "lacks a driver's license of any kind", and which it attached to the complaint before the Civil Guard.

Two days before filing that complaint, San Borondón had made his complaint public through a statement that he sent to the media. That same day in the afternoon, the Yaiza City Council sent another statement, in which it informed that this member of Civil Protection would initiate legal actions for those statements by San Borondón. Along with the statement, the City Council sent the images of the alleged valid driver's license of this volunteer. Despite this, councilman Juan Monzón emphasizes that report from the Local Police, which indicates that in the "Traffic database" there is only a moped license in the name of this member of Civil Protection, obtained in 2005 and which "is no longer valid".

"We are not going to question a report signed by the head of the Local Police of Yaiza," Monzón said on Radio Lanzarote-Onda Cero. Thus, the councilman has questioned the actions of the City Council, pointing out that the head of the Local Police of Yaiza had "presented" that report "directly in the hand of the mayor", Gladys Acuña, and "to the councilman on duty", Javier Camacho. In that report from the municipal agents, it is "requested that the facts be reported to the Mayor's Office as well as to the delegated councilman so that action is taken to prevent the identified person from driving vehicles owned by the administration, without having the permits legally established by the General Regulations for Drivers, especially when it comes to emergency services".

 

The Government group "supports the boy and not the police report"


 "After seeing a statement from the Government group of Yaiza where it supports the boy's action and not the police report, we were very concerned and I brought it to the attention of the Civil Guard so that action is taken in this regard," Monzón explained about the presentation of his complaint. "The question we ask ourselves is how is it possible that a license is sent to the media without verifying where said error is?" the councilman asked about that statement sent by the City Council. 

According to what he indicated, when making public the alleged lack of a driver's license of that member of Civil Protection, San Borondón expected an "action by the corporation", but he has lamented that he has received "silence" in response. "If I present a driver's license and it does not appear in the traffic database, there is some error. And that is what we want to clarify. What we intend is that there is no silence in response, that action is taken in this regard. That is the obligation of any politician," he emphasized. Regarding the legal actions that this volunteer had announced that he would take against the party, Juan Monzón has assured that for the moment the party has not been notified that they have occurred. 

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