The operation Catalonia, a compendium of political scandal and police corruption that portrays a State typical of the days of No-Do, has finally entered the courts. A judge has accepted the complaint filed by Sandro Rosell against the former commissioner villarejo and company, as allegedly responsible for the lies that kept him in prison until a court acquitted him of everything. That is why it has some poetic justice that it is the former president of the Barcelona Football Club who has achieved it, after a dozen frustrated attempts by others interested in knowing who defamed them and who gave the order. What they already know is the reason for such persecution, because Villarejo himself has told it a thousand times. It was one hunt for independentistas with their own nameis supposed as a warning to boaters.
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Villarejo has never concealed his nature as a corrupt police officer, surely as a strategy to intimidate his denouncers until now concentrated in the National Court. The Catalonia operation opens up a political front for him that does not seem to worry him even half of what he has over the Tandem case. You have to imagine that he will embrace the flag of patriotism and the mandate received by the “good people & rdquor; of the PP to save Spain from secessionism. An aberration in democratic terms and a case of Penal Code.
The operation to criminalize some independentistas consisted of the old practice of “making noise” that something remains. But this compendium of political and police horror could not have taken shape without the essential intervention of the third arm of this battalion, that of the collaborating journalists. Certainly the sources are sacred for a journalist, however, it should be the responsibility of the professionals to know the credibility of the same, otherwise, they should assume their lack of tact and, in the worst case, the consequences of their cooperation with the corrupt. This is the Achilles heel of journalism.