The judge of the National Court Joaquín Gadea, who is investigating the attack committed last Wednesday in Algeciras in which a sacristan was murdered and several people were injured, has agreed on Tuesday that the forensic examination of the alleged jihadist, Yasin Kanza, be carried out. for the purpose of informing about their imputability.

In an order notified this morning, and reported by the press office of the National Court, the magistrate indicates that this recognition will be made with full respect for the detainee’s right to defense and with his prior consent. For this, the judge officiates at the forensic clinic of the National Court so that two doctors carry out a psychiatric examination on the person investigated.

In his resolution, the magistrate agrees to a series of procedures such as also requesting the referral of the forensic medical report of the autopsy performed on the murdered sacristan and the summons of 16 people as witnesses, including those who were injured in the attack last Wednesday in Algeciras , to whom the offer of shares will be made as injured parties.

When agreeing this Monday the entry into provisional prison of the author of the attack, the judge maintained that his conduct “was conscious.” With defined objectives and “having the option of causing greater damage, he focuses his action specifically on the subjects he attacks, whom he deliberately chooses.”

First, the priests, “recognizing that their intention was to kill” everyone in the church; and then “focuses his attack on a Moroccan whom he considers unfaithful, believing that he was before a Moroccan convert, for not practicing the authentic religion, and whom he attacked with the intention of killing him”.

It is, the order added, “a profile of a self-indoctrinated terrorist who acts individually and is not directly linked to a terrorist organization”, but who “carries out his action in the name of the jihadist phenomenon to which so many adhere remotely, generating a violent attack that causes terror in society and destabilizes social peace”.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project