A drone or a clipping on the presentation of the e book “Kill the King”: the belongings of Pompeyo González

In the glove compartment of his automobile, he saved the e book “Republic, battle, and focus camps, reminiscences of a Bilbao anarchist”; in his room, a poster of the Passionflower; and in the lounge of his home, tubes at giant, a DJI drone, Mavic 2 mannequin, valued at about 6,000 euros, a picture of Lenin and numerous clippings from outdated newspapers. These are simply a number of the objects that had been present in the home of Pompeyo González, the retiree from Miranda de Ebro arrested this Wednesday for sending six envelopes with explosives to Moncloa, Defense or the Ukrainian embassy. This is confirmed to NIUS by sources of the investigation into this man, lively on social networks

Nostalgic for the USSR, his belongings clarify his ardour for communism. There had been clippings from Gramma, the newspaper of the Cuban regime; from La Gaceta, or from the Diario de Burgos. Most had been outdated and made reference to ETA or the Civil War. Also a duplicate of “Russian Venture: Miranda Volunteers within the Blue Division”.

And among the many clippings, one in regards to the presentation collected by the Diario de Burgos of the e book “Kill the King”, by José Luis Corral, in regards to the intrigues of Castile within the 14th century.

Between clippings and pen drive

But not all the pieces Pompey saved was on paper. He additionally had quite a few pen drives, a laptop computer, a video digicam and that drone, which in response to some info is able to transporting explosives.

The steel tubes had been scattered all through the home. There had been springs, drills, screws. And within the fridge he saved a bag of polymorph, a moldable thermoplastic that the scientific police took dwelling.

There was additionally cash, a number of packages of fifty-euro payments, or a shear that he saved in his automobile, parked exterior the registered tackle.

The Prosecutor’s Office and the brokers who’ve labored on his case consider that he was keen to make extra shipments and that his will was to take action. For this motive, he’s accused of six crimes of terrorism, two of them aggravated for being directed towards members of the Government, and of producing and possession of explosive and incendiary materials.

However, positioned earlier than Judge Calama, of the National Court, González has refused to testify and has not given a solution about his causes for storing all his materials. The prosecutor has requested provisional detention, incommunicado and with out bail for him.