Perfil (Sabado)

Child’s testimony key as man handed life sentence for femicide of pregnant partner

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Aman from Rosario has been sentenced to life in jail for the 2016 femicide of his partner, who was three months pregnant when she was murdered.

Walter Santos Gómez, 35, was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt on Monday after being found guilty of the murder of 23-year-old Daiana Armanino. He found guilty of “aggravated homicide by relationsh­ip of a partner” and “gender violence,” but was acquitted of an additional charge of the “illegitima­te carrying of a civilian firearm.”

Judges Ramón Lanzón, Mónica Lamperti and Gustavo Pérez Urrechu, of Rosario’s Oral Court, decided to hand down the maximum sen ten ce pos si ble un der Argent in a’ s Criminal Code for the crimes.

The court heard that Gómez shot his partner at the home they shared in the Empalme Graneros neighbourh­ood of northern Rosario, on the night of September 12, 2016.

Gómez denied the charge initially, telling police that he heard a shot in his home and had discove

red Armanino’s lifeless body, before handing police a .38-calibre weapon and claiming she had committed suicide.

However, prosecutor­s proved in court that the killing was a femicide, showing evidence that the accused had previously abused his partner before killing her.

According to court sources cited by the Télam state news agency, testimonyf­romt he victim’ sfi veye ar-old da ugh te rt oh ereight- ye aroldbroth­erw as crucial tothec ase.

One of the key pieces of evidence in the trial was a recorded testimony provided by the youngster, Armanino’s daughter. Her version of events was captured by Prosecutor Luis Schiappa Pietra the same night at the crime scene. The audio recording was heard in court during the trial and ratified by experts, who subsequent­ly questioned the girl in a recorded interview.

According to local outlets in Rosario, a neighbour – who was temporaril­y caring for Armanino’s children in the aftermath of the event – reportedly told police that one of the victim’s daughters was re fu tingGómez’ svers ion o fe vents. The neighbour told investigat­ors to listen to two of the children of the deceased, who were talking in her home nearby. The girl was speaking to her eight-year-old brother about the incident. When the prosecutor heard them talking, she immediatel­y ordered her assistant to record their conversati­on.

“She didn’t shoot. Walter killed her. I saw him. He did ‘chic chic’ and hit her. And she died. She didn’t get up anymore. And now she’s in heaven with the little angels,” the girl told her brother.

Two days later, police arrested Gómez and charged him.

ABUSIVE RELATIONSH­IP

A forensic autopsy revealed that Daiana had been shot in the armpit and chest, with an entry wound indicating the bullet had entered diagonally from a highter height. It left the right hemithorax and entered both the lungs and heart, in addition fracturing a rib. There was no exit wound.

Armanino – who had three children from a previous relationsh­ip aged two, five and eight – was pregnant with Gómez’s child when she was murdered. Prosecutor Schiappa Pietra confirmed that the victim was 16 weeks pregnant and that the foetus no longer had vital signs when the body was discovered. Previous injuries, including to the nose and right thigh were discovered, the latter made within 72 hours of her death.

“This is a case marked with strong singularit­ies. The eyewitness to the fact who proved to be fundamenta­l to the sentence is a five-year-old girl,” Schiappa Pietra told the court, requesting the judges hand down the maximum sentence possible to Gómez.

The prosecutor emphasised in court that the murder was part of a pattern of abusive behaviour.

“[Some of] the injuries that the victim had suffered were from a previous acts of aggression, such as blows dating back to four days before.The behavior of gender violence is clear,” he added.

During the trial, which began in July, the victim’s sister, Alejandra, delivered emotional testimony, pa in tingGómez asan a bu si ve partn eran dalle ging he useddrugs.S he said she wasn’t allowed to make con tactwithDa­ia na in dependentl­y and had to send messages through Gómez in order to communicat­e with her sibling. She also revealed that Armanino had been adopted as a child and the two had formed relationsh­ip after being reunited.

Daiana’s three children are now in the care of her aunt, Sonia, who is the sister of the children’s father.

 ?? CEDOC ?? Daiana Armanino with her sister, Alejandra (right).
CEDOC Daiana Armanino with her sister, Alejandra (right).

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