Anahí Ginarte, a forensic expert from the Judicial Power of Córdoba, confirmed that in June 2023, the body of Cecilia Strzyzowski was burned at over 800 degrees for several hours at the Sena family's pigsty in Resistencia. She stated this during the ongoing jury trial in Resistencia. Gustavo Briend, the complainant's lawyer, ratified this testimony and added that the forensic anthropologist also presented to the jury and the court that they had found vertebrae, ribs, skull, phalanges, tibia, femur, clavicle, patella, fibula, and dental pieces, all belonging to a woman. Regarding the extreme temperature used, Ginarte explained that the remains found "showed signs of calcination, not carbonization", which made it difficult to obtain DNA. Francisco Rodolfo Ríos, the owner of a field located in Campo Rossi Sur, adjacent to a property of César Sena, Emerenciano, and Marcela Acuña, also testified at Monday's hearing. In turn, a sister of the accused Gustavo Obregón, a sewing teacher at the school in the Emerenciano neighborhood, and a retired criminalistics expert also testified. The accused in the case are César and Emerenciano Sena, Marcela Acuña, Obregón, Gustavo Melgarejo, Fabiana González, and Griselda Reinoso.
Forensic Expert Confirms Strzyzowski's Body Was Burned at High Temperature
A forensic expert confirmed that Cecilia Strzyzowski's body was burned at over 800 degrees at the Sena family's pigsty. She made the statement during a jury trial in Resistencia, adding that DNA extraction was impossible due to calcination.