Jump to content

Murder of Asunta Basterra

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Wbm1058 (talk | contribs) at 16:30, 13 June 2024 (redirect bypass from Mercedes Benz to Mercedes-Benz using popups). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Asunta Basterra
永芳
Born
Fang Yong

(2000-09-30)30 September 2000
Yongzhou, Hunan, China
Died21 September 2013(2013-09-21) (aged 12)
Parent(s)Alfonso Basterra Camporro (father)
Rosario Porto Ortega (mother)

Asunta Yong Fang Basterra Porto (born Fang Yong; 30 September 2000 – 21 September 2013)[1] was a Chinese-born Spanish girl whose body was found in Teo, A Coruña, Galicia, Spain, on 22 September 2013, shortly before her thirteenth birthday. The coroner determined she had died by asphyxiation, and had been given at least twenty-seven lorazepam pills on the day of her death, more than nine times a high dosage amount for an adult.[2] The investigation into the death became known as the Asunta Basterra case (Template:Lang-es).[3][4][5]

Asunta's adoptive parents, Rosario Porto and Alfonso Basterra were found guilty of her murder on 30 October 2015. According to court documents, the couple periodically drugged their daughter with Lorazepam for three months and finally asphyxiated her before disposing of her body.[2][6] The parents, who maintained their innocence, were sentenced to eighteen years in prison.[2] Porto died by suicide in prison in November 2020.

The case attracted widespread media interest in Spain and around the world, as well as a "statement of concern" from the Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The death of Asunta Basterra also inspired numerous documentaries[6] and a drama series, The Asunta Case, which premiered on Netflix in April 2024.[7]

Background

Asunta Basterra was born Fang Yong in 2000 in Yongzhou, Hunan, China. At nine months old she was adopted by Alfonso Basterra Camporro (born 1964) and María del Rosario Porto Ortega (1969–2020), an affluent Spanish couple from Santiago de Compostela, Galicia.[8] Asunta was the first Chinese child to be adopted in the city of Santiago and one of the first in all of Galicia. Asunta was said to have been a gifted child, being a talented ballet dancer, violinist, and piano player who skipped a year in school.[2] She was also very close to her maternal grandparents, who died the year before her death.[9]

Asunta's adoptive mother, Rosario Porto, came from a prominent Galician family. Her mother, María del Socorro Ortega Romero [gl] (1933 – 12 December 2011), was a highly regarded university lecturer of art history. Her father, lawyer Francisco Porto Mella [gl] (18 December 1925 – 26 July 2012), was an honorary consul of France.[2][10][11] They died seven months apart, both suddenly at home, in 2011 and 2012, respectively.[12]

Porto studied law at the University of Santiago de Compostela and practiced at her father's firm after graduation. She also claimed to have attended the London High School of Law in England, which The Guardian confirmed does not exist. In 1997 she was appointed consul of France, inheriting the role from her father.[2]

Porto met journalist Alfonso Basterra, a native of Bilbao, in 1990. The two married in 1996 and lived in a large flat that had been given to Porto by her parents. Rosario suffered from flare-ups of Lupus erythematosus, which led doctors to advise against pregnancy, so the couple decided to start an adoption process in China.[13] In 2001, they travelled to China and adopted 9-month-old Asunta from the Guiyang Welfare Institute.

On 5 January 2013, Alfonso discovered his wife's infidelity when he checked her emails. On the 8th they argued and separated. At first there were unpleasant scenes; for instance, Rosario felt harassed because Alfonso sent her constant messages with reproaches and accusations. The marriage was divorced by mutual consent effective 14 February. Alfonso Basterra went to see a psychologist and with time, the couple reached an equilibrium. He took care of the girl and, in exchange, received some financial assistance from Rosario, who continued to suffer from her lupus illness as well as depressive episodes.[14] They lived in close quarters and he could be with the daughter whenever he wanted. Asunta split her time between the two homes, walking the short distance between them.[10][15]

On 26 June, Rosario was admitted to the Neurology Department of the Hospital Clínico de Santiago due to a worsening of her illness, with dizziness, instability when walking and drooping of an eyelid. She remained in hospital until 1 July. Her ex-husband reached a pact with her: he would take care of her and their daughter on condition that she cut off her relationship with her lover. She agreed.[16][17]

On the night of the 4th to the 5th of July, a strange incident occurred that could not be explained. Between 02:30 and 04:30 a man tried to strangle Asunta in her room. Rosario claims that the keys were carelessly left in the door. While she slept she heard noises, got up and went to her daughter's room, where a man of strong build and short stature wearing latex gloves had his hands around her daughter's neck. This man was described in the press as "the man in black". Rosario grabbed him, the man pushed her forcefully and ran away. Surprisingly, Rosario did not call anyone to help them.[18][19]

There are different interpretations of this incident. Some believe that it was a pure invention of the mother, others that it was a first attempt at murder carried out by the mother or the parents, or that it was an excuse to give her lorazepam. At the trial, Rosario's neighbour was certain that no one entered the house that night because her dogs did not bark.[20][21]

The mother did not proceed to file a complaint. Asunta told her best friend by WhatsApp that someone had tried to kill her that night, but then did not speak to her about it again. On an outing with another friend, Asunta told the story with signs of distress and the friend's mother contacted Rosario and urged her to report it. Rosario went to ask at the police station in Santiago but finally decided not to file a report, although she told her friend's mother that she had filed one.[22][23][21]

On 9 July, Basterra brought his daughter to music class with signs of drowsiness and dizziness. He claimed that Asunta was having allergies and that an antihistamine had caused this reaction. Later, on 22 July, a similar incident occurred with the headmistress noting Asunta was unable to play well, half asleep, and struggled to walk. After questioning Asunta, she stated that her mother had given her a foul-tasting white powder that left her asleep for hours. [24][25]

In August, Rosario suffered from depression and anxiety, and Alfonso took care of her. Asunta spent the month away from her parents, first with her godmother, from 30 July to 22 August, in Vilanova; later, on 28 August, she went to the countryside with her carer, the woman who helped Rosario with the housework. During her absence, her parents called her every day, but did not visit her. The girl seemed cheerful, happy, and carefree.[26][23][27]

Death and investigation

Asunta was first reported missing by her parents at 10:17 pm on Saturday, 21 September 2013. They had eaten lunch together at her father's home that afternoon. Asunta was seen on a bank's security camera at 2 pm walking to her father's house, and appeared on that same security camera at 5:21 pm returning home to her mother's flat. Porto was seen on the same security camera walking home at 5:28 pm.[28]

Porto initially told investigators that she had left home at around 7 pm, leaving Asunta at home doing homework. She said that she had driven alone to the family's country house in Teo, located about twenty minutes outside Santiago, and that when she returned to her apartment at 9:30 Asunta was missing. Porto said that she called Asunta's father and many of her friends, none of whom had seen her.[2]

Investigators later recovered CCTV video footage of Porto and Asunta at a gas station on the route toward Teo at 6:20 pm, contradicting Porto's timeline and story that she had left Asunta home that afternoon. After being made aware of the video Porto changed her story, this time saying that Asunta had briefly come with her to the country house, but that she quickly took her back to Santiago because the child had wanted to do homework. Porto claimed that after dropping Asunta off at home, she went to a sporting goods store to buy an item for Asunta's ballet class, but did not go in after realizing that she had left her purse in Teo. Porto claimed she then returned to the country house in Teo to retrieve her purse, then went to a gas station but did not fill her tank because she realized she did not have her discount card.[29]

Police examined the video footage from thirty-three security cameras around Santiago and found no video of Porto's car on any of the roads she claimed to have driven on that afternoon. The police in charge of the case came to believe that Porto and Asunta arrived at their house in Teo just after 6 pm, and that Porto left the house around 9 pm.[29]

Asunta's body was discovered in the early morning hours of 22 September 2013, at around 1am, on the side of a small mountain road in the parish of San Simón de Ons of Cacheiras, in the municipality of Teo (just 5 km from Rosario Porto's country house in Montouto, also in Teo), by two young people who alerted the emergency services, who identified the body of the missing girl.[30][31] Not long after, Porto and investigators went together to the country house, where Porto was told not to touch anything since the house could be a crime scene. Porto told police that she needed to use the bathroom; an officer followed her upstairs, and found her attempting to retrieve the contents of a wastepaper bin in the bedroom. The bin contained a piece of the same type of orange twine that Asunta's limbs had been tied with when her body was found. Forensic scientists were ultimately unable to determine whether or not the discarded piece had come from the same roll used in the murder.[29]

On 24 September, Rosario Porto was arrested and investigated for an alleged crime of homicide. A day later, Asunta’s father, Alfonso Basterra, was also arrested and investigated.

In June 2014, Examining Judge Vázquez Taín put an end to the pre-trial investigation of the case, giving way to the process of opening trial.[32] In October, the Sixth Section based in Santiago completed the final judicial procedures.[33] The selection of the popular jury began in May 2015, with the trial scheduled to begin between 23 June and 17 July of the same year, but there were some delays[34] and it was finally in early October 2015 when the trial began in the Provincial Court of A Coruña, with 84 witnesses and 60 expert witnesses.[35]

On 30 October 2015, the jury appointed by the Court of Santiago de Compostela unanimously found both Alfonso Basterra and Rosario Porto guilty of the murder of Asunta Basterra.[36] In May 2016, the High Court of Justice of Galicia in A Coruña corrected the verdict and considered that it was not proven that Alfonso Basterra got into the car and accompanied the mother, it was therefore the mother who caused the asphyxiation, although it maintained the sentence for him for planning and collaborating in the murder.[37] In October of the same year, the second chamber of the Supreme Court upheld the sentence of the High Court of Justice of Galicia.[38]

The investigation into Asunta's death was named Operación Nenúfar ("Operation Water Lily") by detectives, who noted that in the moonlight, the girl's body in her white shirt appeared to be floating above the ground like a flower.[39]

Reconstruction

The parents' activities could be reconstructed in the hours leading up to their daughter's disappearance and death, thanks to testimonies, surveillance cameras, and records from phones and digital devices:[40]

01:55 pm. Asunta leaves her home;[41]
02:00 pm. She passes a bank branch camera on her way to her father's flat, with whom she is going to have lunch;
04:59 pm. The father's first mobile phone records a call from his flat;
05:21 pm. Asunta walks past the same camera, back to her mother's flat;
05:28 pm. Rosario Porto also walks back to her flat;[42]
05:38 pm. Asunta's mobile phone registers a connection, located in her mother's flat in Santiago;
06:12 pm. Rosario Porto appears again on another camera entering the garage of her flat;
06:22 pm. The car driven by Porto goes around a roundabout on the way to Teo; the figures of her and her daughter are seen on board;
06:23 pm. The girl is seen by an acquaintance in the company of her father Alfonso Basterra in the vicinity of Porto's home;[43]
06:35 pm. The alarm is switched off at the Teo house;
07:00-08:00 pm. Estimated time of Asunta's death according to forensics; the estimate is approximate, as the body's temperature was not taken;
07:29 pm. The mother makes an internet data connection;
08:47 pm. The father's mobile phone registers a first connection;[40]
08:53 pm. The Teo house alarm is switched on again; at that approximate time, a neighbor greets Porto in a car but does not see the girl;
09:00 pm. The father appears on the cameras passing again and again, up to nine times, in front of the lens of the bank branch;
09:05 pm. Asunta's mobile phone registers one connection, followed by around 20 others to various phones;
10:31 pm. The parents report Asunta's disappearance at the central police station in Santiago de Compostela;[44]
00:39 am. (approx.) A neighbor passes by the place where the body was later found without seeing anything unusual;[44]
01:30 am. (approx.) A young couple find the body of the girl on their way to the parish of Oza;[45]
01:39 am. The Civil Guard is notified that two people claim to have found a body;
07:00 am. The body is taken from the scene.[44]

During the examination of the body, the forensic experts did not take a rectal temperature for fear of destroying or contaminating evidence, as sexual assault was suspected. Nor did they take a temperature in any other way, for example in the ear or nasal cavity, nor did they take the ambient temperature, so that the time of death could not be established.[46][47] The body was lying on the slope for almost four hours, and twelve hours in a cold room, before vitreous humour was removed from the eye, another procedure for estimating the time of death, which prevented an accurate calculation.[48] The two professors of forensic medicine called by Rosario Porto's defence stated that "the interval established in the autopsy report is not clearly justified".[49][50]

Research

In a first version of the events, Rosario Porto had declared that she left Asunta at around 19:00 hours at her home in Santiago de Compostela, and that when she returned a couple of hours later, the girl was no longer there.

On Tuesday, 24 September, after the cremation of her daughter's body, Rosario was arrested and charged due to the inconsistencies, contradictions and changes of version in her statements.[51][52]

The following day, Alfonso Basterra was also arrested and charged. After learning the results of the toxicology report, investigators suspected him of buying lorazepam for his ex-wife.[53][54]

For three days, the parents were held in two nearby cells in the Civil Guard's cells, where all their conversations were recorded without their consent by order of the examining judge. Later, the Provincial Court of A Coruña would annul the validity of these recordings and prohibit their use in the trial.[55][56]

The mother modified her testimony when she learned of the existence of images from security cameras in which she was seen in the car with the minor on her way to Teo.[57] According to the new version, Porto returned to Santiago de Compostela at around 17:50 leaving Asunta near her father's house, and returned to her house in Montouto.[58]

An analysis of Asunta's hair revealed that she had consumed high doses of lorazepam three months before her death, which is associated with the testimonies of dizziness and drowsiness provided by the teachers at the music academy. The charge was changed from manslaughter to murder, due to the aggravating factors of malice aforethought and kinship.[59][60]

A cousin of Rosario Porto's father told reporters that there was an economic motive in the crime because the daughter was the universal heir of the grandparents and pointed out that Rosario could have killed her parents.[61] The Civil Guard ruled out an economic motive: Rosario was the only heir and her parents had not made any donation to their granddaughter during her lifetime.[62] A year before Asunta's death, the grandmother had died in bed at the age of 77 and the father, seven months later, at 88, also in bed, both from natural causes. The death certificates were signed without any problems and there had been no suspicions about these two deaths. The Civil Guard was unable to investigate further because of the cremation of the bodies. The examining magistrate denied that any enquiries were being carried out into these two deaths.[63][64]

In early October, the Civil Guard's central crime laboratory identified the genetic profile of a man, a young Colombian resident in Madrid, in two semen stains on Asunta's T-shirt. The young man had been accused of raping a minor at a party at his home, but was later acquitted. That is why a condom with samples of his semen was found in the same laboratory and the same cold room where Asunta's T-shirt was analysed. The young man had a solid alibi, as he had dinner that night in Madrid, with his girlfriend, his sister and a friend of his sister, they had posted photos of the dinner on Facebook that night and the receipt for the dinner that night also coincided with what was seen in the photos. Even so, the defences of Rosario Porto and Alfonso Basterra would try to direct suspicion towards this third man, who the press dubbed "the semen man".[65]

On 30 October, the programme Espejo Público (Public Mirror) on Spanish TV channel Antena 3 leaked the first recordings of Asunta's parents in pre-trial detention. Actors reproduced the words of the detainees. Rosario: "You and your little games... Have you had time to get rid of that?" Alfonso: "Shut up, maybe they're listening to us".[66] These phrases do not appear in the official police transcript nor are they heard in any other part of the conversations that were not transcribed, yet they were accepted and repeated for years, before and after the trial, by almost all the Spanish media, including public television.[67][68]

"Probably the most serious episode in the whole matter of the conversations in the prison cells is how one television station quite literally invented some sentences; if they had been used in the trial they would have been exceedingly incriminating, although if the conversations had been used in trial it would immediately have become obvious that this part was an invention.

The programme in question was broadcast in October 2013; they used actors to recreate the conversations and quite simply added the following dialogue on, wich [(sic)] does not appear in either the official transcription or in any other part of the conversations that they did not transcribe. Rosario and Alfonso supposedly said:

R: You and your little games. Did you have time to get rid of that? A: Shut up, they might be listening to us.

The first and last of these three sentences are purely ficticious, while the second one is an adaptation of what Rosario did say: "You didn´t have time to do that, did you?" The problem is that these sentences were then taken as an accepted truth and repeated ad infinitum in the newspapers and magazines and on the televisión (even on the National News on TVE-1, on 30 October 2013)."[67]

At the end of December, Alfonso Basterra's laptop and mobile phone appeared in his home in Santiago. Alfonso's lawyer wrote to the court that Basterra was going to stop renting and that in that flat "the computer of the accused and his telephone have always been there". The two objects that the police had been looking for appeared immediately, although the small apartment had already been thoroughly searched by the agents three months earlier, even though they were not looking for a computer but for evidence of the crime such as sedatives or medications.[69][70]

In June 2014, it was leaked that Alfonso Basterra had visited many pornographic websites including a high proportion of "pornographic videos and images showing women with Asian features," which sparked numerous rumours about his sexual tendencies. It was never made public how many of the videos or images depicted Asian women.[71] The officers' report on the contents of the laptop concluded that the defendant visited all kinds of erotic and sexual websites, not only concerning Asian women.[72]

The defendant's Facebook page was also commented on in various media. Among the 264 people added to his page, there were friends related to his work, spas and tourism, personal friends and workers in the Galician press or television, but also several foreign Asian girls. It was never specified how many. These girls shared photos of themselves in erotic poses on Facebook, but none of these photos appeared on the defendant's Facebook page.[73][74][71]

Numerous articles and programmes in the Spanish media confused the appearance of the photographs of the girl on the mother's old mobile phone with the pornography and images of Asian women found on the father's computer. Sometimes it was stated that the photographs were on the father's computer,[75][76] other times the two reports were simply published together without clearly distinguishing that they were two different facts.[77][68] This created a general opinion of Alfonso Basterra as a paedophile or of the parents as perverts or depraved.

Rosario Porto's lawyer considered the photographs "normal and irrelevant" and claimed that the Civil Guard had been in possession of Asunta's mobile phone for nine months but had allowed them to be leaked to the press at the right time to create a hostile atmosphere towards the parents and try to influence the jury's opinion.[78][72]

The trial was postponed due to the difficulty in selecting jurors. Of the 36 candidates chosen by lot to form the jury, one had died, another could not be located, three were challenged by the lawyers for the defence due to inaccuracies in the questionnaire they had to fill in beforehand, and sixteen gave various excuses which the president of the court accepted, leaving four short of the minimum of 20 candidates.[79] The trial, which was to begin on 13 June, was postponed until the end of September. On 29 September, the first day of the trial, the four remaining candidates required for jury formation were chosen after more than four hours. Three candidates were rejected by the defence lawyers and one by the prosecution.[80]

Following the jury's verdict and the condemnatory sentence, Rosario Porto's lawyer, José Luis Gutiérrez Aranguren, expressed his opinion that the jury was contaminated by the media[81] and that he would state this in the appeals that he was going to present before the High Court of Justice of Galicia and the Spanish Supreme Court:

"In the case at hand, the impact of the mass media in the formation of a preference for the accusatory thesis in public opinion is ostensible. For example, on 20 November 2013, journalist José Manuel Pan published the following headline on the website of the newspaper La Voz de Galicia: "Rosario Porto killed Asunta in Teo and she alone disposed of the body". "[82]

Verdict

At the end of the trial, which lasted more than four weeks and for which 135 witnesses were called,[83] and after four days of deliberation, the jury returned a guilty verdict for both parents that resolved some of the main issues in the case, but also left doubts.

The jury considered (in section 9 of the proven facts) that the time of death was between 06:00 pm. and 08:00 pm., for which it gave more weight to the toxicology report on the digestion process than to the autopsy evidence with the analysis of the vitreous humour. Specifically between 06:33 pm. and 08:00 pm.[84][85]

The jury considered it proven (in section 1 of the proven facts) that both parents "repeatedly" and "by common agreement" supplied their daughter with lorazepam, a drug sold as Ativan, which Alfonso Basterra was in charge of buying. They supplied it for at least three months before the death, three times in July and once on 18 September.[84][85]

The jury also considered it proven (in section 4 of the proven facts) that on the day of her death the parents ate with the daughter at the father's apartment, and that there they gave her a quantity of lorazepam, which was necessarily toxic, in order to asphyxiate her later, when it took effect.[84][85] Lorazepam takes effect in the first 45 minutes after oral ingestion, but a bank shows that Asunta walked "upright, oriented and fast" on her way from her father's house to her mother's house at 17:21 in the afternoon.[86] Alfonso Basterra's lawyer argued in her closing argument that it was not coherent to let the girl out alone at five in the afternoon if after ingesting lorazepam at lunch she should be in a semi-comatose state and anyone could see her or stop her in the street.[87][88] And the witness who claimed to have seen Asunta in the street with her father, at around 18:22, did not observe anything abnormal in her gait.[89]

The jury gave credibility to the testimony of a young woman, three years older than Asunta and a classmate of hers in French classes at the Alliance Française for three years, who claimed to have seen her with her father in the street on the afternoon of 21 September. The young woman had gone with her boyfriend to buy some trainers in a sports shop in General Pardiñas Street. On the way out, she saw Asunta and Alfonso Basterra walking up Avenida de El Salvador and stopping at a pedestrian crossing. She knew both of them well, but did not greet them. The witness's friend did not know them and did not notice them.[90][91]

The following day, when the classmate found out on Twitter that Asunta Basterra had been found dead, she stated to her relatives that she had seen her and her father the previous afternoon. After two months, given that there was much talk in the media about the father's involvement in the crime and his activities that afternoon, the parents decided to have the daughter testify before the examining magistrate. Until then, they had preferred to keep her away from such a mediatic procedure and to avoid her name being made public.[90]

The purchase ticket and a camera recording from the Sabadell bank in General Pardiñas Street proved that she had indeed been there that day. The witness's purchase ticket, shown at the trial, indicated 06:21 pm. as the moment when the barcode was read,[90] and 06:22:23 pm. when the cash register was opened. The witness stated that as soon as they paid, they left immediately and she saw Asunta and her father walk past her.[92][89]

This would imply a temporal inconsistency with the camera from the Galuresa petrol station, in whose images Rosario and Asunta are in their car on their way to Teo at 06:21:24 pm. Also with the camera from the Galician Parliament which records the Mercedes-Benz at 18:20:21 pm.[93] The cash register of the shop was not examined because two months had passed, but the testimony of the witness that she recognised Asunta and her father on the day of her death was believed by the Jury, although the time was not known with total certainty. Furthermore, the examining magistrate thought that what was important was not the time, which could be wrong on the cash register, but that the witness recognised Alfonso and his daughter without any doubt on the afternoon of the murder, which would indicate that Alfonso had lied when he declared that he had been at home reading all afternoon.[93][89]

However, the camera of the Sabadell bank shown in the documentary by Bambú producciones shows the witness with her companion at 06:24:54 pm. on the same day. This would suggest that the time on the cash register may not be wrong. But, as it is impossible for Asunta to be in two places at the same time, and being seen in her mother's car on the way to Montouto by the camera at the petrol station at 06:21:24 pm. and far from where the witness says she saw Asunta with her father, it seems to point to the fact that the witness did not really see her.[94][95]

If what the witness says is true, Asunta waited at the traffic lights, walked one block to Doctor Teixero street and got into the car, which passes a camera in front of the Galician Parliament at 06:20:21 pm. and the petrol station at 06:21:24 pm., but the witness, without stopping at any traffic lights, reached the Sabadell bank, a distance of about 50 or 60 metres at 06:24:54 pm., four minutes and thirty-three seconds later.[96]

At the trial it was established that the witness was able to see Asunta and her father in the street at 06:23 pm.[91]

In section 7 of the proven facts, the jury states that the camera at the Galuresa filling station was out of time: "in the Galuresa camera at 06:21 pm., taking into account a time difference due to the lack of synchronisation of cameras, Rosario and Asunta are seen in the Mercedes Benz";[85] however, at no time had there been any talk of a time difference in that camera; on the contrary, when reconstructing the route of Rosario Porto and Asunta that afternoon, the judicial police officers had verified the accuracy of the times:

"However, in the cameras that were searched and recorded and obtained frames of the route that does appear, parliament and Galuresa service station, there was a very detailed specification of 'Here is this time but compared to the real time, there is a difference of seconds' and there was no problem in putting it on record."

José Luis Gutiérrez Aranguren, lawyer for Rosario Porto[89]

"From the time Doña Charo leaves the garage at 06:14 pm. until she arrives at the Galuresa at 06:21 pm., this entire itinerary has been checked and collated."

Belén Hospido, lawyer for Alfonso Basterra[89]

The examining judge, when questioning Rosario Porto about the movements of that afternoon, told her: "We even have it timed".[97]

The Sabadell bank camera was not exposed at the trial by either the prosecutor or any of the defendants.[98] The same camera had recorded Rosario walking to the garage to pick up the car two months earlier, and the time on that camera had been inspected. The cash register, on the other hand, was not inspected. Rosario Porto's lawyer: "That box (the cash register of the purchase of the trainers) was never inspected whether it was on time or not, which was done in all the other records of cameras and recordings".[95]

Alfonso Basterra's defence claimed that the witness saw Asunta with her father but on another day, since Asunta and her father had indeed passed by that same street on another day.[99]

If Asunta had taken the sedative at her father's house, lorazepam by oral ingestion takes an hour to have its maximum effect, but according to the witness, who saw her walking around 06:23 pm., Asunta was walking normally.[100] The explanation given by the toxicologists and the forensic expert who conducted the autopsy is that lorazepam is one of the benzodiazepines that has less effect as a muscle relaxant. Asunta could feel a strong drowsiness, but without incoordination of movements or difficulty in walking.[47] The defense lawyers stressed that, with such an intake of lorazepam, Asunta would have been comatose at the time and that the amount ingested was, according to forensic experts, "necessarily toxic".[101] When questioned by the defense, the witness confirmed that Asunta was walking normally and that if she had been walking strangely she would have noticed it.[92]

Another problem left by the testimony of Asunta's young classmate and that was treated only in passing in the Atresmedia documentary is where Alfonso was coming from with Asunta, why he had moved away from her house and from the street where Rosario's Mercedes Benz passes to return later. It makes no sense if Alfonso Basterra was trying to avoid the cameras and was only accompanying Asunta to get her into her mother's car as discreetly as possible.[102]

In the report of Asunta's disappearance, Rosario declares that she left her at home, but a few hours after the investigation she adds one more detail: when leaving in her Mercedes towards the farm, she had stopped in a double line in front of the doorway of her house to get a bag to store the swimsuits she was going to pick up from Teo, at the country house.[103] In her final statement, a few days later, she acknowledges that she stopped in double line, went up to get a bag and Asunta came down with it. For two months, before the contribution of the testimony of the classmate, the agents of the investigation and the examining judge assumed that Rosario had stopped in double line to pick up the girl.[104] They also assumed that Alfonso Basterra had helped Rosario Porto to take the girl down, because she was drugged.

"When you got down (moved down, "bajó") your daughter into the car, who helped her into the car? Because your daughter was so drugged that it was impossible for her to get up on her own feet." Examining magistrate, José Antonio Vázquez Taín.[105]

The formulation of the question indicates his belief that the girl did not walk down the street. In the conversations recorded during their detention in the prison cells, the mother asks Alfonso twice if he left the house the afternoon of Asunta's disappearance, which indicates that they did not meet in the street because the question would not make sense if she had seen him. These conversations were not used in the trial because they were considered illegal recordings.

Rosario: Let me ask you something, Alfonso, you didn't go out in the whole afternoon?

Alfonso: No, not at all, don't worry.

Rosario: You're sure, right, Alfonso?

Alfonso: I give you my word of honor, baby. I give you my word of honor, Charo, that I didn't go out.

(Recording of the third night in the prison cells of the Civil Guard Headquarters in A Coruña, September 26, 2013).[106]

The jury considered it proven (in section 9 of proven facts), by the statement of the witness who placed Alfonso with Asunta around 18:22 in General Pardiñas street, that Rosario did not stop to pick up a bag and left with the girl, as she had finally declared, but that Rosario stopped to pick up both of them because they were already in the street. Nothing indicated that Alfonso returned to his home and, while "the cameras make it clear that at least Rosario and Asunta are in the car, however, no camera can rule out the presence of Alfonso in it".[84][85] As no camera picked up the back of Rosario's Mercedes-Benz, it could not be ruled out that he was crouched there.[84]

The High Court of Justice of Galicia corrected this statement. The mother could only be located in the house in Montouto where the murder took place.[107] The jury's argument was considered "not very rational reasoning" and "incompatible with the logical criteria of induction based on proven facts".[108][109] Even so, both the High Court of justice of Galicia and the Spanish Supreme Court understood that the father was equally guilty of the same crime and was sentenced to the same penalty because they had planned it together and had intervened with essential acts in the execution of the plan.[107][110]

The jury unanimously found Rosario Porto and Alfonso Basterra guilty of the death of their daughter Asunta. They concluded that they sedated her for months and asphyxiated her by suffocation. After finding no "unproven facts", they were against the pardon and the suspension of the sentence. The jury went even further than the prosecutor, by not rejecting the possibility that Basterra also went in the car to Teo with the girl and her mother.

After the reading of the verdict, which Rosario Porto listened with more fortitude and to which Alfonso Basterra responded with various gestures of denial, the prosecutor requested 18 years in prison for aggravated murder with aggravating circumstances of kinship and abuse of authority. The popular accusation, represented by the Clara Campoamor association, asked for the "maximum penalty" for the parents, 20 years in prison. Two weeks after the verdict, the sixth section of the Provincial Court of A Coruña finally sentenced the parents to 18 years in prison[111] with special disqualification from exercising parental authority during this period of time and payment of the costs.[85]

The verdict did not discuss the possible motive for the murder, which the investigation also failed to clarify satisfactorily,[112] giving rise to numerous hypotheses and conjectures with little real basis in the press and social networks.

Sentence and imprisonment

On 16 March 2016, the High Court of Justice of Galicia dismissed the appeals of the lawyers of both parents and confirmed the 18-year sentence, although it acknowledged that it was Rosario who suffocated her daughter.[108]

On 22 November, the Supreme Court also dismissed the appeals of the defence, acknowledging that there was no evidence of Alfonso Basterra's presence in the house where the murder allegedly took place, but condemning him all the same "as he participated on an equal footing with Rosario Porto and intervened in essential acts that led to the execution of the criminal act", "without the intervention of the appellant [Alfonso Basterra] the macabre outcome could not have been carried out".[113]

In June 2017, the Constitutional Court rejected the appeal for amparo filed by the defence of Rosario Porto.[114] Likewise, it rejected Alfonso Basterra's appeal, presented by a lawyer assigned by the court, following the resignation of his lawyer Belén Hospido.[115][116]

Since their imprisonment, Asunta's parents, despite being in the same prison, never met again except in court. They did not maintain any relationship after the sentence.[117]

Suicide of Rosario Porto

Rosario Porto attempted suicide in prison on two occasions. On 24 February 2017, after it was announced that she was going to be transferred to the prison of A Lama, in Pontevedra, she was found unconscious due to an intake of sleeping pills that she had been accumulating and had to be admitted to a hospital.[118] She was subsequently transferred, and on 12 November 2018, in her new prison, she tried to take her own life by hanging herself in the showers with the cord of a sweatshirt around her neck, but the sudden appearance of another inmate saved her. On 12 November she was admitted to the prison infirmary for deep depression.

On 22 March 2020, she was transferred to Brieva women's prison in Ávila, a decision that she did not accept willingly. The anti-suicide protocol was applied to her during the initial phase[51] as well as on another six occasions during her sentence.[119]

As a lawyer, Rosario Porto was able to help her fellow prisoners to prepare legal appeals or to better understand their procedural situation.[120] She had sent letters to the penitentiary institutions and to the Spanish Ombudsman.[121]

While serving her sentence, Rosario Porto took her own life on 18 November 2020, hanging herself from a window with a belt made of sheeting.[122]

Cultural impact and media depiction

In Spain, the disappearance and death of Asunta Basterra attracted more media coverage and public attention than any other crime. The Professional Association of Journalists of Galicia and the Faculty of Journalism of the University of Santiago de Compostela criticised in a statement the news treatment given to the Asunta case.[123][124] The BNG, Galician Nationalist Bloc, took this criticism to parliament and asked the Xunta, Government of Galicia, to promote compliance by the public and private media with codes of ethics in cases of violence involving minors.[125][126]

At the end of 2014, crime reporter Cruz Morcillo published El crimen de Asunta ("Asunta's crime"), in which she collected a large number of details about the investigation and the proceedings of the case, which she had covered for Spanish newspaper ABC and El programa de Ana Rosa.[127]

On 6 October 2016, the Basque television ETB 1 broadcast the documentary El caso Asunta, as part of the programme El lector de huesos ("The Bone Reader"), in which the forensic anthropologist Francisco Etxeberria [es] discusses the details of the autopsy.[128]

A four-part documentary about the case, Lo que la verdad esconde: Caso Asunta ("What the Truth Hides: The Asunta Case"), directed by Elías León Siminiani, premiered on Spanish television on 24 May 2017.[129] It was considered a landmark documentary in Spain, which historically has eschewed the true crime genre.[130] It became available internationally on Netflix in February 2019.[131]

In 2018, the English translator based in Santiago, Mark Guscin, published The murder of Asunta Yong Fang.[132] In April 2024, he published the Spanish translation: Lo que nunca te han contado del caso Asunta.[133]

The Asunta Case, a six-part Spanish-language miniseries, was released on Netflix on 26 April 2024 [7] in co-production with Bambú producciones. Created by the producers of the 2017 documentary, this series amalgamates a number of different fictionalized versions of what may have happened.[134] The series features several high-profile Spanish actors such as Candela Peña, Tristán Ulloa, Javier Gutiérrez, María León and Alicia Borrachero.[135] The names of the secondary characters have been changed and their personal lives have also been invented. At the end of each chapter, a note clarifies that the judicial and police plots have been fictionalised to adapt them to the narrative rhythm of a fictional series.[136][137]

In the fifth episode of the series, two opposing versions of Asunta's death are shown. Civil Guard Ríos states that Rosario Porto acted alone and then Alfonso Basterra decided to support her and pretend with her that someone had kidnapped her daughter; on the other hand, the version given by judge Malvar is that they both did it because the girl knew a secret that could destroy them.[138][139][140] In chapter three, around minute 18', the prosecutor tells the examining magistrate that the evidence is not solid enough to order the father's pre-trial detention. When in chapter six, minute 6', the civil guard investigators reveal photographic evidence which strongly suggests that the witness who saw Alfonso with Asunta in the street could not really have seen them, the examining magistrate dismisses their research, stating that the recordings merely show a time difference which may be interpreted in a variety of ways. He is also confident that the defence lawyers will never find that photo.[141]

See also

References

  1. ^ Mahía, Alberto (7 June 2017). "Caso Asunta: Los padres la asesinaron; pero ¿por qué lo hicieron?". La Voz de Galicia (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 13 December 2018. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Tremlett, Giles (2 February 2016). "Why did two parents murder their adopted child?". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 11 November 2020. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  3. ^ "Adopted child's death grips Spain". IOL News. AFP. 26 September 2013. Archived from the original on 23 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  4. ^ "为夺遗产?西班牙夫妇疑杀害中国养女". Sina.com.cn (in Chinese). 28 September 2013. Archived from the original on 23 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  5. ^ de Pedro Amatria, Gonzalo (24 May 2017). "Elías León Siminiani, director de 'El caso Asunta': "Rosario habla de su hija con un nivel de dolor y amor que estremece"". El País (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 23 February 2019. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
  6. ^ a b "Spanish woman tells court she did not kill adopted Chinese girl". The Straits Times. AFP. 1 October 2015. Archived from the original on 21 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  7. ^ a b "'The Asunta Case' true story: The real events behind Netflix's true crime show". TODAY.com. 26 April 2024. Retrieved 26 April 2024.
  8. ^ Capeáns, Juan; Mahía, Alberto (31 October 2015). "Rosario y Alfonso sedaron y asfixiaron a Asunta". La Voz de Galicia (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 10 December 2020. Retrieved 23 February 2019.
  9. ^ Lázaro, Fernando; Sueiro, Marcos (26 September 2013). "La Guardia Civil quiere investigar la muerte de los abuelos de Asunta". El Mundo (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 23 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  10. ^ a b "Rosario Porto: "Nadie lloró como yo por Asunta"". El País (in Spanish). 23 August 2017. Archived from the original on 10 December 2020. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  11. ^ Guerra, Andrés (27 September 2013). "Así era la familia de Asunta a ojos de sus compañeros de colegio". Vanity Fair (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 23 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  12. ^ "Los abuelos maternos, un apoyo clave cuando fue la adopción de la niña en China". La Opinión de A Coruña (in Spanish). 27 September 2013. Retrieved 30 April 2024.
  13. ^ Xurxo, Melchor (27 September 2013). "La detenida padecía lupus y el pasado verano sufrió episodios de ansiedad". La Voz de Galicia.
  14. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 11–18. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  15. ^ "Los padres de Asunta pleitearon por la custodia de su hija en el proceso de divorcio". El Faro de Vigo. 30 May 2014.
  16. ^ Melchor, Xurxo (8 March 2014). "Caso Asunta: Basterra quiso vengarse al ver que su exmujer le seguia siendo infiel". La Voz de Galicia.
  17. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1527511507.
  18. ^ Pan, José Manuel (22 November 2013). "Caso Asunta: ¿Quién es el hombre de los guantes?". La Voz de Galicia.
  19. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1527511507.
  20. ^ F., M. (23 July 2014). "Un crimen que comenzó una madrugada de julio". La Opinión a Coruña.
  21. ^ a b Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Cambridge Scholars. p. 35. ISBN 978-1527511507.
  22. ^ Ortiz, Ana María (18 November 2020). "¿Mataron Rosario Porto y Alfonso Basterra a Asunta porque les molestaba?". El Mundo.
  23. ^ a b Melchor, Xurxo (12 December 2013). "Asunta: "No hables de esto a nadie"". La Voz de Galicia.
  24. ^ Capeáns, Juan (8 October 2015). "Asunta a sus profesoras: "No tengo alergia, no sé lo que me dan pero nadie me dice la verdad"". La Voz de Galicia.
  25. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 39–50. ISBN 978-1527511507.
  26. ^ Balín, Mateo (5 October 2015). "La madrina de Asunta tiene la clave". El Correo.
  27. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Cambridge Scholars. pp. 53–54. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  28. ^ "Asunta Basterra, lo que la verdad esconde". El Espanol. 25 May 2017. Archived from the original on 28 May 2017.
  29. ^ a b c Pontevedra, Silvia R (7 Oct 2015). "Surveillance cameras debunk story offered by Asunta's mother". El Pais. Archived from the original on 4 March 2021. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
  30. ^ "西班牙被领养中国女孩遭奸杀 案件调查出人意料-中新网". www.chinanews.com. 27 September 2013. Archived from the original on 23 September 2020. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  31. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  32. ^ Rodríguez Pontevedra, Silvia (20 June 2014). "El juez cree que Alfonso Basterra "participó en la asfixia" de Asunta". El País.
  33. ^ Rodríguez Pontevedra, Silvia (19 October 2014). "La Audiencia anula las conversaciones de los padres de Asunta en el calabozo". El País.
  34. ^ "Seleccionados 20 nuevos candidatos para el jurado del 'caso Asunta'". El País. 19 June 2015.
  35. ^ Ortiz, Ana María (28 September 2015). "¿Mataron a Asunta porque les molestaba?". El Mundo.
  36. ^ Puga, Natalia (30 October 2015). "Los padres de Asunta, culpables". El Mundo.
  37. ^ "El TSJ de Galicia ratifica la condena a los padres de Asunta a 18 años de cárcel tras desestimar sus recursos". www.rtve.es. 16 March 2016.
  38. ^ "El Supremo confirma la condena a 18 años a cada uno de los padres de Asunta". Sur. 11 September 2016.
  39. ^ Lo que la verdad esconde: Caso Asunta, part 3
  40. ^ a b Rodríguez Pontevedra, Silvia; Seijo, Pepe (21 March 2014). "Asunta: medio año y cabos sueltos". El País.
  41. ^ Melchor, Xurxo (27 September 2015). "El último día de Asunta Basterra". La Voz de Galicia.
  42. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  43. ^ Rodríguez Pontevedra, Silvia; Seijo, Pepe (16 March 2014). "Asunta, envenenada gota a gota". El País.
  44. ^ a b c Vizoso, Sonia (22 September 2013). "Hallado en Santiago el cadáver de una niña de 12 años con signos de violencia". El País.
  45. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 99–100. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  46. ^ Abad, Nacho (14 October 2015). "Un cálculo improvisado: 27 pastillas de Orfidal para Asunta". La Razón.
  47. ^ a b Rodríguez Pontevedra, Silvia (14 October 2015). "Asunta había ingerido al menos 27 pastillas de Orfidal el día de su muerte". El País.
  48. ^ Abad, Nacho (29 September 2015). "¿Y si Asunta murió después de las nueve de la noche?". La Razón.
  49. ^ Abet, Patricia (3 December 2014). "Dos forenses dudan de la autopsia de Asunta y de la hora de su muerte". ABC.
  50. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  51. ^ a b "Cronología del 'caso Asunta Basterra': de la desaparición de Asunta al suicidio de Rosario". El Confidencial. 18 November 2020.
  52. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 75. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  53. ^ Balín, Mateo (3 October 2015). ""No sedé a Asunta. Era lo que más quería."". El Correo.
  54. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  55. ^ "La Audiencia anula por ilegales las escuchas a los padres de Asunta en los calabozos". El Faro de Vigo. 22 October 2014.
  56. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  57. ^ "Rosario Porto reconstruye ante el juez las últimas horas de Asunta en Santiago". El País. 19 December 2013.
  58. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. NewCastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 85–87. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  59. ^ "El pelo de Asunta Basterra revela altas dosis de sedante en julio y antes de su muerte". El Mundo. 18 October 2013.
  60. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  61. ^ "Una prima de Rosario Porto apunta a un móvil económico". La Nueva España. 26 September 2013.
  62. ^ "Asunta no recibió donaciones en vida de sus abuelos". La Razón. 2 October 2013.
  63. ^ Reboyras, Arturo (20 October 2013). "La Guardia Civil quiso investigar la muerte de los padres de Rosario Porto pero la cremación lo impidió". El Faro De Vigo.
  64. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle on Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 9–10. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  65. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 115–118. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  66. ^ "Primeras conversaciones de los padres de Asunta tras ser detenidos". www.antena3.com. 30 October 2013.
  67. ^ a b Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 123–124. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  68. ^ a b Abad, Nacho (8 June 2014). "¿Quién hizo las fotos de Asunta?". La Razón.
  69. ^ Morcillo, Cruz (2014). El crimen de Asunta [Asunta's crime] (in Spanish). Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. p. 202. ISBN 978-84-9060-239-3.
  70. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 143, 145. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  71. ^ a b Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 144. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  72. ^ a b "El abogado de Porto considera "normales e irrelevantes" las fotografías de Asunta". El Faro de Vigo. 6 June 2014.
  73. ^ "Descubren amistades extrañas en el facebook de Alfonso Basterra". El Correo Gallego. 22 January 2014.
  74. ^ "Las sospechosas amistades de Alfonso Basterra en Internet". www.antena3.com. 22 January 2014.
  75. ^ "El padre de Asunta tenía fotos íntimas de la menor en su ordenador". www.libertaddigital.com. 5 June 2014.
  76. ^ "El padre de Asunta tenía imágenes macabras de su hija en el ordenador". La Información. 5 June 2014.
  77. ^ Melchor, Xurxo (4 June 2014). "Alfonso Basterra tenía fotos íntimas de Asunta y material pornográfico de mujeres asiáticas". La Voz de Galicia.
  78. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  79. ^ Melchor, Xurxo (13 June 2015). "Los problemas para formar el jurado retrasan el inicio del juicio de Asunta". La Voz de Galicia.
  80. ^ "Seleccionados los miembros del jurado para el juicio del 'caso Asunta'". El Correo. 29 September 2015.
  81. ^ Melchor, Xurxo (5 December 2015). "Caso Asunta: las seis razones por las que el abogado de Rosario Porto pide su absolución". La Voz de Galicia.
  82. ^ Gutiérrez Aranguren, José Luis (4 December 2015). "Al Tribunal del Jurado Sección 6ª de La Ittma. Audiencia Provincial" (PDF). ep00.epimg.net.
  83. ^ "Termina el juicio por la muerte de Asunta Basterra". La Voz de Galicia. 23 October 2015.
  84. ^ a b c d e Puga, Natalia (30 October 2015). "Las respuestas del jurado a las 21 preguntas del caso Asunta". El mundo.
  85. ^ a b c d e f Marín Arrizabalaga, Andrea. "El "caso Asunta" ante el tribunal del jurado: perfiles problemáticos de un veredicto" (PDF). addi.ehu.es.
  86. ^ Abad, Nacho (2 March 2014). "Asunta Basterra no fue drogada durante su última comida". La Razón.
  87. ^ Capeáns, Juan (23 October 2015). "La abogada de Basterra dice que no hay pruebas contra él". La Voz de Galicia.
  88. ^ Capeáns, Juan (24 October 2015). "Hospido cree que solo acusaron a Basterra para encajar el relato". La Razón.
  89. ^ a b c d e "Analizamos las incógnitas que dejó el testimonio de Clara Baltar: ¿Asunta caminó drogada?, ¿Salió Alfonso de casa?". La Razón. 1 July 2018.
  90. ^ a b c Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon tyne: Cambridge Scholars. pp. 81, 82. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  91. ^ a b "El testimonio inesperado de Clara Baltar que desmontaba la coartada de Alfonso Basterra". www.antena3.com. 1 July 2018.
  92. ^ a b Abad, Nacho (5 October 2015). "Una testigo desmonta a Basterra". La Razón.
  93. ^ a b Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 85. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  94. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Cambridge Scholars: Cambridge Scholars. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  95. ^ a b "La prueba que no se aportó en el juicio y podría dar un giro al caso Asunta". www.antena3.com. 8 February 2018.
  96. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  97. ^ Morcillo, Cruz (2014). El crimen de Asunta [Asunta´s crime] (in Spanish). Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. p. 63. ISBN 978-8490602393.
  98. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The killing of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  99. ^ Capeáns, Juan (24 October 2015). "Hospido cree que solo acusaron a Basterra para encajar el relato". La Voz de Galicia.
  100. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  101. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 99. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  102. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). The murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  103. ^ Morcillo, Mark (2018). El crimen de Asunta [ASunta´s crime] (in Spanish). Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. p. 26. ISBN 978-8490602393.
  104. ^ Morcillo, Cruz (2014). El crimen de Asunta [Asunta´s crime] (in Spanish). Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. p. 21. ISBN 978-8490602393.
  105. ^ Morcillo, Cruz (2014). El crimen de Asunta [Asunta´s crime] (in Spanish). Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros. p. 49. ISBN 978-8490602393.
  106. ^ Guscin, Mark (2018). the murder of Asunta Yong Fang. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-5275-1150-7.
  107. ^ a b "El Tribunal Supremo confirma la sentencia del 'caso Asunta'". www.poderjudicial.es. 11 October 2016.
  108. ^ a b Vizoso, Sonia (16 March 2016). "El Tribunal Superior confirma la condena a los padres de Asunta". El País.
  109. ^ de Pablo, José María (1 November 2015). "Sobre el veredicto del caso Asunta". josemariadepablo.com.
  110. ^ "El Supremo confirma la condena de 18 años a cada uno de los padres de Asunta". El Faro de Vigo. 11 October 2016.
  111. ^ "Ya hay condena: 18 años de cárcel para los padres de Asunta Basterra". El Confidencial. 12 November 2015.
  112. ^ "¿Por qué mataron a Asunta Basterra? Todo lo que se sabe (y lo que no) del caso de la menor". El Confidencial. 18 November 2020.
  113. ^ "Cronología del 'caso Asunta Basterra': de la desaparición de Asunta al suicidio de Rosario". El Confidencial. 11 November 2020.
  114. ^ "El Constitucional cierra la puerta al recurso de Rosario Porto por el asesinato de Asunta". Europapress. 22 June 2017.
  115. ^ "Portazo del TC a Porto y Basterra al inadmitir los recursos de amparo". El Correo Gallego. 22 June 2017.
  116. ^ "Manzano: No sé por qué Hospido renunció". El Correo Gallego. 22 June 2017.
  117. ^ "Respuesta a una petición de 'visita' de su ex: "No lo quiero ver ni en pintura"". El Correo Gallego. 30 October 2013.
  118. ^ Rodríguez, Paco (18 November 2018). "Los otros intentos de suicidio de la madre de Asunta". La Razón.
  119. ^ "Prisiones aplicó 6 veces el protocolo antisuicidios a Rosario Porto". Noticias de Navarra. 18 November 2018.
  120. ^ Ruiz Ballesteros, Roberto (19 November 2020). "Los últimos meses de Rosario Porto en prisión". El Confindencial.
  121. ^ Lozano, Vanesa (19 November 2020). "Rosario Porto, días antes de suicidarse: "No tengo a nadie cuando salga de aquí"". Diario de Córdoba.
  122. ^ "Spanish mother convicted of 2013 child murder found dead inside her prison cell". El País. 18 November 2020. Archived from the original on 19 May 2023. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  123. ^ "Facultade de Xornalismo e CPXG apelan á "responsabilidade" dos editores na cobertura do 'caso Asunta'". praza.gal. 3 October 2013.
  124. ^ "A más precariedad, peor información". fesperiodistas.org. 8 October 2013.
  125. ^ "O asasinato de Asunta chega ao Parlamento". galiciaconfidencial.com. 3 October 2013.
  126. ^ "Adán pide aplicar o código deontolóxico nos casos de violencia contra menores". www.bng.gal. 2 October 2013.
  127. ^ Abet, Patricia (27 November 2014). "Cruz Morcillo: "Si Asunta hubiese pertenecido a otro entorno, ¿se habría actuado igual?"". www.abc.es.
  128. ^ A., H. (6 November 2016). "El caso Asunta Basterra, esta noche, en 'El Lector de Huesos'". www.eitb.eus.
  129. ^ Marcos, Natalia (22 May 2017). "Tras el rastro del 'caso Asunta'". El País (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  130. ^ "El caso Asunta: Investigar y analizar crímenes, la nueva afición de los amantes de las series". La Vanguardia. 31 May 2017. Archived from the original on 24 February 2019. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  131. ^ Santonja, María (8 February 2019). "Las series españolas que vienen en 2019: Netflix". Fuera de Series. Retrieved 22 February 2019.
  132. ^ "Mucha gente cree que Rosario Porto es un monstruo, pero es una mujer frágil". El Correo Gallego. 28 July 2018.
  133. ^ Campoviejo, Maruja (9 April 2024). "El libro del "inexplicable" crimen de Asunta". www.lavozdegalicia.es.
  134. ^ Agrawal, Shikhar (26 April 2024). "'The Asunta Case' Ending Explained: Why Did Rosario Kill Asunta, According To Netflix's Series?". dmtalkies.com.
  135. ^ Pérez G., Daniel; Roche, Calum (1 May 2024). "The physical resemblance of the actors and the real people in the 'The Asunta Case' on Netflix". en.as.com.
  136. ^ de Luna, Álvaro (26 April 2024). "Crítica de 'El caso Asunta': ¿merece la pena ver la serie de Netflix?". Esquire.
  137. ^ Coock, Rebecca (3 May 2024). "Asunta Case: The true story of Rosario Porto and Alfonso Basterra". Digital Spy.
  138. ^ Juesas, María (26 April 2024). "El episodio 5 de 'El caso Asunta' causa conmoción: Netflix arriesga más que nunca con lo que se ha visto en la serie". Fotogramas.
  139. ^ Pallas, Beatriz (26 April 2024). "Ramón Campos: «A Rosario se le va la cabeza y mata a Asunta porque es el eslabón que la une a Alfonso»". La Voz de Galicia.
  140. ^ "The Asunta Case opens up old wounds in Spain". enterprise.news.
  141. ^ Méndez, Marcos (24 April 2024). "Vemos 'El caso Asunta' a un lado y otro del sofá: del que llega a ciegas a la serie, a quien ya conocía todo del suceso". El Diario.