The same day as the Public minister began her extradition process from Spain, where she was captured, Pamela Cabanillas He posted a series of messages on his Instagram account, the social platform he keeps active with more than three thousand followers.
About the 19-year-old girl, alleged leader of ‘The scam QR’weighs 18 months in preventive prison for the alleged crimes of identity theft, aggravated fraud and falsification of documents committed in Lima, at the end of 2022, during the concerts of Bad Bunny and Daddy Yankee.
With this scam, via a platform identical to that of the legal ticket sales company —Teleticket—, Cabanillas and his accomplices collected, according to police calculations, some 500,000 soles.
On Wednesday, after Peruvian authorities issued an arrest warrant to Interpol, she was located on a street in the neighborhood Spaniard of Carabanchel. He had taken pictures in Milan and on a station platform. according to the newspaper The country, the train he recently posed next to is from Renfe.
In the midst of the prosecutor’s announcement to deliver her to Peruvian justice, the young woman answered a series of questions from her followers.
“I would like to have the chance to be with the whole family by my side,” he replied to a user. “To those sunk, I swear you get out of there and when you get out you shine a whole lot brighter,” reads another post.
There Interpol considered that Cabanillas he felt untouchable in Europe. When she was arrested, she was completely carefree in the middle of the street in Madrid.
While in Spain, she was also arrested for theft, but as it was a minor property offense and was her first time, she was released.
“He didn’t resist. She’s still an 18-year-old girl. The police in Spain He never makes arrests alone and they have no opportunity to resist or be violent. That doesn’t mean she wasn’t surprised, because after all, as she herself has stated on social media on several occasions, she considered herself on the run in Spain and untouchable.” Inspector Vanessa Arrieta.
The international capture of the young woman is characterized by five offences: identity theft, damage to property, aggravated fraud, falsification of a private document and attack on public faith.
Cabanillas offered the tickets through social networks and assured that his father worked in the Peruvian Association of Authors and Composers (Apdayc); With this false argument, he justified the low price he was offering.
Additionally, he met his victims, showed his ID, and took them to his alleged home, gaining their trust. After completing the transaction, he blocked the aggrieved parties to avoid claims.