Today, like every Thursday, “Justicia en Primera” arrives, the cycle led by Enrique “Quique” Russo. The first program dedicated entirely to issues in the judicial field, which features the protagonists of the most resonant cases, who tell everything in the first person.

The shipment, which is broadcast on Thursdays at 8:00 p.m. and is hosted by Enrique “Quique” Russo, will have the former prosecutor Gabriel Sagastume, the former secretary of Prosecutors, Luis Poncetta and the criminal lawyer Juan Di Nardo, all of them in the EL DIA studios. ex-combatants of the Falklands War. They will talk about the conversation that took place last week.

Gabriel Sagastume, ex-combatant and ex-prosecutor of La Plata, assured: “Those of us who entered as children, after returning from the war, was one of the tools that allowed us to ‘reintegrate’ or overcome the trauma. The work and environment of the Judiciary He is kind, he allowed us to have a better post-war period compared to other colleagues”.

“I was 25 years old, I started as an employee in the Court, then I was in the creation of the Department of Quilmes and I returned to La Plata to work as a prosecutor in Prosecutor’s Offices and then as a trial prosecutor,” he said, recalling his experience.

“The instruction was quite long, we had no information and after informing myself in some books, there was a plan to recover the Malvinas. When Galtieri forced him to give up Viola at the end of 1981, he made an agreement with the Navy where he was going to support them to occupy the Falkland Islands,” he explained.

Also, the ex-combatant Sagastume, recounted: “I had a problem in the Military Band, I dropped my drum in a parade and from there they expelled me and transferred me to the Infantry Company. In March 1982 they discharged me, I I went back to my house and on April 9 they summoned me again”.

Last week, in the last installment, the guests Manuel Bouchoux, official defender, and Laura Altamiranda, judge of the Criminal Court No. 6 of the Lomas de Zamora Judicial Department, spoke about the Malvinas Conversation.

“They are going to tell us a little about the management that they had to do, it is not for a debate or a discussion, but a conversation so that they can tell us about their experiences, the meaning of the war and how it affected them from that moment, their passage by the Judiciary and at the present time”, highlighted Judge Altamiranda.

“This tribute is very necessary, it was pending for the Colegio de La Plata. It is a recognition of the judicial workers, who, once the war was over, began a career in the Judiciary, were our colleagues and deserve it,” he said. Manuel Bouchoux, while Altamiranda added: “They are the living memory of something that affected them, in particular, and everyone as a society.”

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