Lawyer Miguel Cabrera Pérez-Camacho, professor at the University of La Laguna and president of the Royal Casino of Tenerife He has sent a letter to the club members explaining his version of the events for which he has been reported.
Cabrera Pérez-Camacho argues in his statement to have suffered a revenge attack from a former colleague at his law firm, whom he accuses of having convinced a “dupe” to report him for sexual assault. “An unscrupulous lawyer, whom I had to kick out of my office not long ago, has managed – in his desire for revenge – to manipulate an unsuspecting person into stating that I carry out sexual assaults,” the statement reads.
The accused reiterates that “never in his life” has he done such things and that he is not going to do so at 69 years old, “during which time I dedicate myself to my job, the Casino and my four grandchildren.” The statement ends by notifying the partners that he will go to court with all the means that the laws grant me “to defend his honor and” this beloved institution that I am honored to preside over.
A meeting to carry out internships at your law firm
According to the complaint filed with the Civil Guard, once at the lawyer’s home, the two began a conversation, which was initially banal. Cabrera-Pérez Camacho was interested in the young man’s place of residence, with the intention of meeting to eat together, since where he lives there are “good restaurants.”
After the conversation, both They sign the agreement to carry out the internship at the law firm. According to the victim’s version, after the talk and the signing of the contract, Miguel Cabrera insisted that she stay in the house for a moment so that he could show her the house. The complainant told him that he was in a bit of a hurry, but, at the professor’s insistence, he gave in to his request.
When he was next to the window of a room from which the pool can be seen, the young man reported that the lawyer then touched his shoulders and neck. A gesture that made him move away. Cabrera Pérez-Camacho then asked him if it was embarrassing, to which he responded: “no.” What the young student clarified to the teacher is that he did not like those types of gestures.