They returned to the place where he lived, key in hand, knowing exactly what they sought.
En una tarde de diciembre en Rincón de la Victoria, un hombre fue rodeado, golpeado y despojado de sus pertenencias por tres desconocidos que, días después, regresaron a su hogar con la llave que le habían arrebatado. Lo que comenzó como un asalto callejero reveló ser algo más deliberado: una violencia que no terminó en la calle, sino que siguió hasta el umbral de su propia casa. La Guardia Civil desarticuló el grupo con rapidez, recuperando buena parte de lo robado, pero el rastro de planificación y ensañamiento queda inscrito en el expediente judicial como testimonio de hasta dónde puede llegar la depredación organizada.
- Un hombre fue rodeado y golpeado metódicamente el 19 de diciembre hasta caer al suelo, con heridas graves que requirieron atención médica.
- Los mismos tres agresores regresaron días después a su domicilio, entraron con una llave obtenida durante el asalto y causaron daños estructurales mientras saqueaban joyas y efectivo por valor de unos 60.000 euros.
- La operación se desmoronó en el momento de la huida: dos detenidos fueron sorprendidos in fraganti al salir de la vivienda, con joyas ocultas en un calcetín y casi 1.300 euros en efectivo encima.
- El tercer sospechoso logró escapar inicialmente, pero fue identificado y detenido al día siguiente gracias a la coordinación entre la Guardia Civil y la policía municipal.
- Los tres han sido ingresados en prisión provisional por orden judicial, y la mayor parte de los objetos robados ha sido recuperada como prueba.
La tarde del 19 de diciembre, un vecino de Rincón de la Victoria fue interceptado en su propio barrio por tres hombres que lo golpearon con fuerza hasta derribarlo. Le arrancaron la cadena de oro, las joyas y el dinero que llevaba encima. Las heridas fueron lo bastante graves como para requerir atención médica. Los agresores huyeron en un vehículo de alta gama, dejándolo tendido en la calle.
La Guardia Civil inició la investigación de inmediato, y lo que fue aflorando apuntaba a algo más que un robo oportunista. Los mismos tres individuos habían conseguido una llave durante el asalto. Días después, regresaron al domicilio de la víctima, entraron sin forzar la puerta y se movieron por las habitaciones con determinación: dañaron techos, rompieron instalaciones del baño y se llevaron joyas, efectivo y otros objetos por un valor aproximado de 60.000 euros. Era una segunda violación, esta vez en el espacio más íntimo del hombre.
Sin embargo, la operación se truncó en la salida. Cuando los tres abandonaban la vivienda, los agentes de la Guardia Civil ya estaban allí. Dos fueron detenidos en el acto; en el registro, uno ocultaba un calcetín con varias piezas de joyería y 1.265 euros en efectivo, y el otro llevaba 952 euros. El tercero logró escapar, pero fue identificado y arrestado al día siguiente en la propia comandancia, con la colaboración de la policía municipal.
Los objetos recuperados quedaron catalogados como prueba. Los tres detenidos pasaron a disposición judicial y el juez acordó su ingreso en prisión provisional. El caso avanza ahora por la vía judicial con buena parte de lo robado devuelto, aunque la violencia del primer asalto y la frialdad del regreso al hogar de la víctima permanecen como eje central de la acusación.
On the afternoon of December 19th, a man in Rincón de la Victoria, a town in Málaga province, was walking through his neighborhood when three men surrounded him. They beat him methodically—fists and kicks landing repeatedly—until he fell. They took his gold chain, his jewelry, the cash in his pockets. The injuries were serious enough that he needed medical attention. The attackers fled in an expensive car, leaving him bloodied on the street.
The Guardia Civil opened an investigation immediately. What they discovered over the following days suggested this was not a random mugging but something more calculated. The same three men, it appeared, had taken a key during that first assault—or obtained one somehow. Days later, they returned to the victim's home.
They let themselves in with that key and moved through the house methodically. They damaged the ceiling in several rooms. They broke fixtures in the bathroom. They knew what they were looking for. From the residence, they stole jewelry, cash, and other valuables totaling approximately 60,000 euros. It was a second violation, a second theft, this time from the place where the man lived.
But the operation unraveled quickly. As the three men were leaving the house, Civil Guard officers arrived. Two of them were caught in the act of departing. During the search that followed, officers found a sock hidden on one of the suspects containing multiple pieces of jewelry and costume jewelry, along with 1,265 euros in cash. The second suspect was carrying 952 euros. The third man escaped initially, but officers working with local police identified him and arrested him the next day at Civil Guard headquarters.
The stolen items and recovered cash were catalogued as evidence. All three detainees were brought before a judge, who ordered them held in provisional prison pending trial. The operation was conducted by officers from the main Civil Guard station in Rincón de la Victoria, working in coordination with municipal police. The case now moves through the judicial system, with the victim's losses partially recovered but the full scope of the crime—the violence, the planning, the return to his home—documented in the record.
Citações Notáveis
The victim was violently assaulted by three individuals who struck him repeatedly with fists and kicks, stealing a gold chain, various pieces of jewelry, and cash, causing serious injuries that required medical attention.— Guardia Civil statement
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why would they come back to the house days later? Wasn't the first robbery enough?
That's the question, isn't it. They had the key—either they took it during the assault or found it somewhere. But more than that, they knew what was in the house. The first robbery was violent and immediate. The second was deliberate. They were going back for the things they couldn't carry the first time.
How did the Civil Guard respond so quickly the second time?
They were investigating the first assault. They had descriptions, they were looking. When the suspects returned to the house, the timing worked against them. The officers were there.
The victim—what happens to him now?
He has his home back, some of his things back. But he was beaten badly enough to need medical care. He knows these three men know where he lives. That doesn't disappear when they go to prison.
The 60,000 euros in valuables—was most of it recovered?
The reporting doesn't say. We know they found jewelry and cash on the suspects when they were arrested, but whether that accounts for the full amount, we don't know. Some of it may still be missing.