“A democracy cannot assume that its members are not equal before the law”

The judge of the Second Chamber of the Supreme Court Pablo Llarena, instructor of the ‘procés’ cause, has stated that “A democratic society cannot assume that its members are not equal before the law.”

He made these statements, in reference to the amnesty law agreed between the PSOE and Junts, after collecting the Golden Scale Award which has been awarded to him by the Illustrious College of Attorneys of Madrid (ICPM) “for his extraordinary contribution to the world of Justice and the Rule of Law”, in an event held at the Real Casa de Correos in Madrid.

Llarena has defined what role the “jurisdictional function” has in a democratic society and has concluded that the distinction he has received “is an incentive for judges and prosecutors” to continue working “with responsibility and independence.”

This 29th edition of the awards was attended by representatives of the General Council of Attorneys of Spain and the College of Madrid, members of the General Council of the Judiciary and magistrates of the Supreme Court.

Separation of powers

In addition to the award to Pablo Llarena, the ICPM has also awarded an honorable mention posthumously to the relatives of Ramón Rodríguez Arribas, vice president emeritus of the Constitutional Court and judge of the Supreme Court, who died last month at the age of 89.

The son of this magistrate thanked him for the recognition, which is “a great satisfaction for his children and wife,” and added that it is important to honor someone who was a “faithful defender of the separation of powers.”

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For her part, the Deputy Minister of Justice and Victims of the Community of Madrid, María del Carmen Martín García-Matos, spoke during the event to highlight the importance of rewarding the two magistrates “precisely now” and that “it is legitimate to ask if The events we are experiencing represent a attack on our rule of law”.

The president of the General Council of the Attorney Generals of Spain, Juan Carlos Estévez, has thanked Llarena “for defending democracy and the Constitution” and the dean of the college of these professionals in the judicial world, Alberto García, in the same vein , has stated that they will continue to stand by “the people who fight for the independence of the judiciary.”

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