Ruth Ortiz, the mother of Ruth and José, killed by her father, José Bretón, in 2011 when they were six and two years old, has made public a letter after the anagram seal paralyzed on Wednesday the distribution of the book Hate, Signed by Luisgé Martín (Madrid, 63 years old), who draws a profile of the murderer and in which Breton publicly admits that he killed the children. “We cannot in any way or give voice to the murderers so that the honor can be missed, the intimacy and the image of the victims, or so that they can revictimize them. If it is not well regulated, it will have to regulate themselves correctly, and if it is regulated and it is not fulfilled, it has to be fulfilled and enforced,” says the woman in the letter to which the country has had access.
The seal, which had the departure to libraries on March 26, confirmed on Wednesday to El País that has decided to paralyze the distribution of Hate while consulting the case with its legal services. Ortiz, through his lawyer, asked justice not to allow the publication of the work before the Provincial Court and the Prosecutor’s Office of Córdoba for illegitimate interference of the right to privacy and the image of the deceased minors, according to the documents to which this newspaper had access.
“When a woman asks for help, a mother asks for help, it is because she really needs her,” says Ortiz. The mother of the killed children for which she was her ex -partner, in prison for the crimes after being sentenced to 40 years, thanks to all the organisms that, in her words, have helped her to get the publication not to come out. “Thanks to the service of attention to the victims of Córdoba, for attending to my request for help, help and amparo. They welcomed me, attended and supported during the trial for the murder of my children in 2013 and they have help me again and support this new battle. Thank you!” The Provincial Prosecutor of Barcelona. “Thanks to the Victims Attention Service of Huelva and my lawyer from Córdoba, I only have words of thanks.”
“I have hope: among all, we will stop any type of violence that is exercised towards women,” Ortiz ends his letter.
In her complaint, Ortiz’s lawyer pointed out that the dissemination of the work has generated a “massive transmission and publication of data and information that affects her children, she already her family.” “These facts are causing tremendous pain and new psychological damage in my principal,” said his lawyer in the letter sent to the Provincial Court, “which is attending horror how the life and murder of their two young children is publicly exposed in all media with details, comments and expressions that do not even appear in the sentence, plagued by terrible statements.”
“Apparently, it contains data, letters and references that affect the intimacy of minors,” he includes the section of crime victims of the Provincial Prosecutor’s Office of Córdoba in his brief response to the request of women.
Hate It consists of a double proposal: on the one hand, the book reconstructs the crime, the previous days and the police investigation, and draws a sowing of Breton through the testimony of the murderer himself. On the other, it tells the story of personal approach between the writer and the inmate, which over several years cross about 60 cards, telephone calls and have face -to -face conversations.