Woman speaks who took her dead uncle to ask for a loan at a bank in Brazil

Woman speaks who took her dead uncle to ask for a loan at a bank in Brazil
Woman speaks who took her dead uncle to ask for a loan at a bank in Brazil

On April 16 they captured Erika de Souza Vieira Nunes, of Brazilian origin, to ltake his dead uncle to a bank and try to get a loan in his name for the sum of 17,000 reais (about 12 million Colombian pesos). The video of the moment went viral on social networks.

(In context: A woman took a dead body to the bank and tried to take out a loan in her name.)

The curious event happened in a bank branch in Bangu, in the western area of ​​Rio de Janeiro. By evidencing that the man did not respondbank employees decided to call the authorities and the Mobile Emergency Assistance Service (Samu) He assured that the 68-year-old man had been dead for several hours.

On May 2, local media reported thatThe Rio de Janeiro court ordered the release of Erika and they emphasized that she would have mental health problems and a minor in charge. The 42-year-old woman was accused, by the Public Ministry (MPRJ), of the crimes of attempted embezzlement and desecration of a corpse, Indian Or Globe.

In addition, she is investigated for “flagrant omission of assistance” towards her uncle Paulo Roberto Braga, whom she transported to the bank in a wheelchair to sign the loan papers.

(We recommend: They demonstrate with video that a woman took her dead uncle to a bank and did not die in the entity as she claimed).

Érika de Souza Vieira claimed to be the caretaker of Paulo Roberto Braga, who would be her uncle.

Photo:Social networks

The statements of Erika de Souza Vieira

I can not understand it. I don’t think I or many people realized he passed away. How do you give a dead person a piece of paper to sign?

The woman, who now must comply with precautionary measures, such as appearing in court every month, He came out to give statements about what happened.

In his statements to the newspaper Folha de S.Paulo, Érika claimed not to have realized that her relative had died: “I can’t understand it. I don’t think I or many people realized she passed away. “How do you give a dead person a piece of paper to sign,” she said.

(Also: The macabre discovery of a corpse in Sucre along with a shocking message: ‘Keep going…’).

The Brazilian remained firm and continued to clarify that she had no intention of committing any crime: “I didn’t realize my uncle was dead. What people say is absurd. I’m not that person people talk about, “I’m not a monster.”

He even claimed to have had a conversation with his uncle before entering the bank branch: “I asked him if it would be better to hold his (head). “He said yes,” he explained.

She defended herself by saying that she does not remember very well what happened at the bank because of the controlled medications she consumed that day and added that she was not her uncle’s caregiver: “He was independent, he walked, he did what he wanted, he had a good memory.” . He was not in a wheelchair and I was not his caregiver.”

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