Madrid (EFE) any psychiatric disorder for the purposes of his imputability.
Two forensics attached to the National Court will be in charge of interviewing the person investigated, who will be transferred to the headquarters of this court from the Estremera prison in Madrid, where he was admitted after the attack for terrorist crimes related to the machete murder of the Sacristan Diego Valencia.
When he was brought before the courts, he already had to be examined by a coroner, who determined that he was in a position to give a statement, although now it is a matter of examining him in greater depth, as agreed by the reinforcing magistrate of the Central Investigating Court 6, Joaquin Gadea.
After sending him to provisional prison for the terrorist murder of sacristan Diego Valencia, Gadea proposed evaluating Kanjaa’s mental state “with full respect for the detainee’s right to defense and with his prior consent.”
As the defense did not oppose this, he will finally be evaluated by two doctors from the forensic clinic of the National Court, who previously had to collect data on the medical history of this 25-year-old Moroccan, who was pending deportation, and who apparently he has a psychiatric history in his country.
Once the two doctors interview him and analyze that medical history, days later they will issue their opinion to the judge, who with the result of that report will decide on the imputability of the person being investigated.
Next month, on the 17th, 21st and 24th, the judge plans to question 19 witnesses, among them the priest Antonio Rodríguez, one of the four injured in this attack, and who has been summoned in person, as well as than to another of those affected in the attack on the churches of San Isidro and La Palma, so that both give a statement as injured parties.