A new precedent that complicates Rodrigo Rojas Vade It was known during the last hours, which reinforces the thesis that what happened with the ex-conventional was a simulated attack.
Rojas Vade, known for faking cancer, was found on March 12 on the side of Route 78. He was unconscious, with blows to the head, his hands tied and political messages on his arms: “long live Kast” and “no+lefties”.
After that, he remained in life-threatening condition and had an induced coma, but he has now emerged from that condition. Currently, he is in clear recovery and left the ICU of the San Juan de Dios Hospital.
First, the ECOH Prosecutor’s Office investigated a possible kidnapping. However, currently the hypothesis of a simulated attack by Rojas Vade himself.
Calligraphic expertise
Initially, it was known that you tie them that the ex-conventional worker had were similar to the ones he had in his house and that the marker with which the scratches were made was in his car.
Furthermore, it is estimated that drug consumption could have caused his serious health condition and it is now known that the scratches found on the arms by Rojas Vade are similar to the lyrics on their posters.
According to The Clinic, it was carried out a graphological examination to the messages that were on the activist’s limbs. This comparing strokes, writing style and letter patterns.
In this way, it was estimated that there are coincidences between the posters that Rojas Vade carried for the protests of the social outbreak and what was written on his arms.
The aforementioned media also took images of the scene of the event to a calligraphy expert external to the investigation, Camilia Filidei, who came to a similar conclusion.
“Both the writing that Rojas Vade presents on his arm, as well as the writing that is displayed on the banners – presuming that they were written by him – appear as strokes with angular endings. In addition, the graphic typography is printed and very symmetrical in nature, which means that the graphic factors and indications exist to determine the ‘founded technical presumption’ of the same author’s hand. That is, it would have been written by the same person,” he noted.
The investigation is still ongoing.
