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Jaime Giménez Arbe

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Name
  
Jaime Arbe


Jaime Giménez Arbe httpsabordaxefileswordpresscom20150497884

Born
  
January 12, 1956 (age 68) (
1956-01-12
)

Other names
  
El Solitario (The Loner)

Criminal penalty
  
47 years imprisonment

Conviction(s)
  
Homicide (two counts)

Jaime gimenez arbe el solitario habla en exclusiva


Jaime Giménez Arbe (also spelt Jiménez: born Madrid, 12 January 1956) is a Spanish anarchist and bank robber known as El Solitario ("The Loner").

Contents

Jaime Giménez Arbe TV VIDEOS ONLINE La Polica incapaz de identificar a Jaime

He admitted to more than thirty armed robberies of banks all over Spain, and was also convicted of the murder of two Civil Guards in Castejón (Navarra). In addition, in Vall de Uxó (Castellón), during an exchange of fire with El Solitario, one policeman died due to a stray bullet fired by another policeman. He was sentenced to 47 years' imprisonment in July 2008.

Jaime Giménez Arbe Biografas de Asesinos ASESINO 135 Jaime Gimnez Arbe biografa

He was previously imprisoned in the United Kingdom for drug trafficking, and eight minor trials in Spain had yet to take place. He speaks Spanish, Italian, French and Portuguese.

El solitario Jaime Giménez Arbe. 2008


Detention

Jaime Giménez Arbe Jaime Gimnez Arbe Edicin impresa EL PAS

He was arrested on 23 July 2007, in Figueira da Foz (Portugal) as part of "Operation Gloria". A large number of police officers, both Spanish (National Police officers and Civil Guards from the Central Operational Unit) and Portuguese (Judiciary Police) were there to arrest him while he was, presumably, about to rob the “Caixa Agrícola” Bank, located in Saraiva de Carvalho Street, near the market and the famous Figueira Casino. He was charged with the murder of two Civil Guards, whom he shot after they asked him to identify himself.

Jaime Giménez Arbe El Solitario tuvo posibilidad de abatir a los agentes de un tiro y

When he was arrested, he was disguised with false beard, mustache and wig and, as always, he wore his bulletproof vest and carried three guns: two short ones and an automatic one. The unprecedented police presence looking for him ended a decade of crimes that made him one of the most wanted criminals in Spanish criminal history. In his usual dwelling, and also in a warehouse of his own, large amounts of guns and ammunition were found, as well as articles of disguise.

Jaime Giménez Arbe El Solitario se crea Robocop Edicin impresa EL PAS

He was taken to Coimbra, where he was to make a statement before a judge. At the court door, before the many curious people and the media, he shouted "Hola a todos, soy El Solitario. ¡Salud españoles!" ("Hi, everyone. I’m The Loner. Here’s to you, Spain!")

Stay in prison

On 27 July 2007 he started a hunger strike as a protest against being moved to a high security level prison. He stopped the protest two days later.

Jaime Giménez Arbe El juicio a Jaime Gimnez Arbe alias El Solitario empieza el lunes

According to his lawyers, Portuguese Elisa Maia and Spanish José Mariano Trillo-Figueroa, he admitted being a robber, but denied having murdered the three people of whose deaths he is accused, claiming that the former Civil Guard General Enrique Rodríguez Galinda, and the former Extremadura Junta President Juan Carlos Rodríguez Ibarra were involved in them. While admitting the robberies, he stated that he “robbed banks in order to liberate the Spanish from the banks’ thefts”.

Trial

During his trial in the Navarra Provincial High Court in July 2008, Jaime Giménez Arbe pleaded not guilty to the charge of murder of two Civil Guards, as well as declaring himself antisystem and anarchist and defining his robberies as “bank expropriation”. He also said he had started his criminal career with Corsican anti-capitalist groups, with which he committed his first robbery. Those sworn statements are similar to the ones in the letter he wrote in a letter to “public opinion” during his stay in Zuera prison.

He was found guilty of the murder in 2004 of the two police officers, and was sentenced to 47 years' imprisonment.

References

Jaime Giménez Arbe Wikipedia