
Federal prosecutor Franco Picardi requested the National Security Ministry to provide evidence to incorporate into the sedition lawsuit filed after the incidents at the retirees' march. Picardi opened an investigation based on the complaint from Fernando Soto at the request of Minister Patricia Bullrich, after federal judge Sebastián Casanello referred the case to him.
In a recently signed ruling, the prosecutor required the Ministry to provide various elements mentioned in the complaint. Among them, access to the complete records of calls received on the Ministry's Line 134, where reports of the presence of 'barras bravas' and possible violent acts during the demonstration have been made.
Additionally, information was requested regarding mobilized groups not linked to the retirees, as well as records of assaults on police forces, weapons used, and the alleged organizer of the violent mobilization. Picardi also requested data on 'barras bravas' groups from certain municipalities of Buenos Aires.
The complaint presented by official Fernando Soto accuses the aggressors at the retirees' demonstration of having arrived premeditatedly with knives, firearms, and objects to cause harm and injury. It is mentioned that the aggressors were organized and intended to provoke violence during the mobilization, with elements clearly aimed at aggression.