Global Courant
This was told by Gloria Romero, the mother of the young woman who disappeared in Chaco. She denounced that her father’s accounts appeared on Instagram to ask for money: “The death of my daughter is not a business.”
The claim image of Gloria Romero for the disappearance of her daughter Cecilia Strzyzowski is repeated over and over again. However, the null participation of the young woman’s father was striking. “He hasn’t seen her daughters for 24 years,” Gloria clarified, and warned that “he is a personal friend of the Sena and Acuña family,” accused of the crime in Chaco.
Cecilia’s mother published a series of stories late Thursday on her Instagram account, after “the appearance of accounts from the father.”
“I want to clarify that I never ask for money through any account. Now it turns out that accounts appear from the father. The father and I divorced 24 years ago. In 24 years he never had contact with the girls nor did he spend food quota. So he’s not the father of the year,” Gloria began.
In addition, he warned that Cecilia’s father “was a partner” of Patricia Acuña, Marcela’s sister. And he continued: “He is a personal friend of the Acuñas and the Senas. I have nothing against him, but I don’t want them to use the death of their daughter to get money.”
“The death of my daughter is not a business. I will not allow it. I want justice for my daughter and that these people go to jail. I am outraged. Do not fall into traps. If at any time I ask for something, I will do it for here. Nothing about Cecilia’s father has to do with me,” he added.
Lastly, Gloria said that she “raised her daughters alone” and that she only received help from her mother. “It’s been 24 years since I saw the father’s face and now he appeared. So please don’t give him money. Don’t donate money to anyone because I don’t ask for it. They’re going to rip you off because they are such sons of bitches that they use death from a creature to rip off. They are garbage. Before you donate, contact me,” the message concluded.
Cecilia Strzyzowsk, the young woman who has disappeared in Chaco since June 2.
Cecilia’s mother was this Friday morning at the Resistance Institute of Medicine and Forensic Sciences, where they will show her objects seized as part of the investigation in order to establish whether or not they belonged to her daughter.
Gloria Romero, along with her mother and her other daughter Ángela, will participate in the procedure that will be carried out at the institute’s headquarters located at kilometer 1,008 of National Route 11, where they will be exhibited, among other items, clothes, a suitcase, rings and a pendant of a cross, kidnapped in different operations carried out in the framework of the cause for the femicide of Cecilia. The lawyers of the defendants and judicial investigators will also participate in the recognition.
Romero had assured that with the images that she has already seen circulating on the internet, she is practically sure that she has identified some objects that appeared burned and that will be formally exhibited as belonging to her daughter.
The presumption of the investigators is that the burned suitcase found in the Emerenciano Sena neighborhood is part of the luggage that Cecilia had prepared for the trip that she was supposedly going to make to Ushuaia with her partner César Sena, currently detained in the case, and that he said in the shape of a cross found on Tuesday in a search of the Tragadero river, in a sector of the field of the accused family’s pig farm, it is the one the victim used as a pendant.
Emerenciano Sena, his son César and Marcela Acuña.
This Friday morning, at the door of the Institute of Medicine and Forensic Sciences, Juan Arregin -one of Romero’s lawyers- explained that the objects will be placed on a table so that Cecilia’s mother, grandmother and sister can see them. and, in case of recognizing them, give details about them.
As Clarín was able to learn, the hypothesis that the prosecution is handling is that the young woman was murdered inside the house at Santa María de Oro 1460, in Resistencia, on Friday the 2nd, when she was last seen entering. One of the strongest hypotheses speaks of a possible strangulation of her.
For the investigation, the strongest tip is that Marcela Acuña would be “the ideologue” of the crime. She is the person who had pressured her son César to divorce the young woman just a few weeks after the marriage they had contracted behind the backs of the Sena.
Acuña herself declared during an investigation that she saw “a bundle” similar to “a body” inside the house on Friday, June 2, when the murder is believed to have occurred. This point complicates her son, but frees both her and her husband, who arrived at the house around noon.
Currently the three Sena are listed as co-perpetrators of the crime, a distribution of responsibilities that will be resolved next Tuesday when the prosecutor’s office headed by Jorge Cáceres Olivera requests preventive detention and justifies what they believe each one did.