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An Alicante criminal group crashes into police vehicles

Guardia Civil Alicante Car Crash

Operation Twilight ended with a high-risk pursuit to apprehend a burglary-focused criminal gang from Alicante. The accused members of this clan were apprehended in a coordinated operation by the Civil Guard and the Local Police in the Region of Murcia, where this incredibly dangerous escape attempt occurred.

The officers were able to predict the movements of this criminal group based in Alicante, from which they travelled to the area of the Guadalentín Valley, after an investigation by the Guardia Civil of Murcia revealed an increase in robberies in homes in the municipalities of Lorca and Puerto Lumbreras.

Three members of this purported network were arrested a few days earlier. Civil Guard investigators discovered that the suspects’ vehicle was in the municipality of Lorca. After spotting this movement, the Local Police quickly teamed up with several departments to set up a monitoring system in the region, which paid off.

When the suspects’ car was going towards Lorca along the Águilas route, the Civil Guard found it. The car’s occupants left quickly after the authorities stopped it, driving carelessly and endangering other drivers.

The suspects intentionally struck many police cars during their escape in an effort to evade capture. The officers, however, stopped the vehicle before it could pose a bigger risk to the police and civilians in the vicinity of the incident.

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Following the operation, the three car occupants were arrested on suspicion of committing the following crimes: assaulting an authority figure, burglary, damage, membership in a criminal organisation, and license plate counterfeiting. Although their authorship of other crimes and the involvement of more individuals in the now-explained illicit activity are not ruled out, they are suspected of being the authors of about twenty criminal acts.

This Alicante-based criminal organisation allegedly committed home robberies in the cities of Lorca and Puerto Lumbreras in the Guadalentín Valley, raising social panic among the local populace. Agents from the Civil Guard were alerted to the robberies and started looking into it.

The Murcian agents’ thorough technical and visual inspections, together with other investigations, yielded a wealth of information about the perpetrators and methods of the crimes.

After conducting an initial reconnaissance of their targets and verifying that no one was inside the residences, the accused criminals broke through the perimeter fence and forced open security features like closed-circuit televisions and window and door bars.

The criminals swiftly examined every room in the building after entering in order to take cash and valuables, while they also took some tech equipment in some of the crimes.

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Other crimes committed by the same criminal group occurred concurrently with the investigation, which gave investigators the opportunity to determine the behaviour of the offenders in terms of their routines, methods of operation, and areas of activity. This also helped them predict the criminal group’s movements.

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Following their discovery on the Águilas road and subsequent arrest, the Civil Guard officers confiscated a variety of items and belongings that the criminals were allegedly transporting in order to carry out the house invasions.

Among them, a hydraulic shear, used to cut bars; crowbars, used for leveraging; screwdrivers, to force locks; walkie talkies, to communicate within the criminal group; caps and tubular scarves, to hide their identity and thus avoid being identified; and several sets of license plates used to make it difficult to link the vehicles to the criminal acts they committed. In addition, more than 3,000 euros in cash have been seized from them.


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Costa Blanca

Man arrested in connection with five fires at La Florida, Alicante

Alicante Bomberos Fire

The culprit behind five fires in the Valencian town of Mislata in Alicante has been taken into custody by National Police officers. The fire caused substantial property damage and necessitated medical attention for smoke inhalation.

The National Police were notified of many simultaneous fires that were erupting in multiple spots within the La Florida-La Viña neighbourhood at midnight on March 25th. Personnel from the Alicante Fire Station and members of the Provincial Citizen Security Brigade were also sent to the several locations.

A number of vehicles were also impacted by the fire, which caused significant damage to many of them and entirely burnt one due to the ferocity of the flames, which in every instance had begun in waste containers.

Containers and cars caused the fire to spread to the building façade, putting the occupants of surrounding residences in danger. Firefighters rescued a blind woman who was unable to leave her home, and residents of many residences, including those in a game room, were forced to flee.

Because of the perilous circumstances, the massive volume of smoke, and the spectacular character of the flames, some people needed medical assistance for anxiety attacks and smoke inhalation. The signs of two nearby companies were also materially damaged, as was the façade of these buildings.

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The inquiry was taken over by judicial police officers from the Alicante Central District Police Station, who carried out a number of investigations to confirm the timeline and ultimately identify the alleged fire offender.

Officers found the offender in the Valencian town of Mislata after doing the necessary investigation, and he was taken into custody on charges of arson and destruction.

Eleven rubbish and recycling containers worth 17,500 euros were damaged in the fire, along with seven cars, one of which was totally destroyed.

Following police investigations, the 42-year-old inmate was sent before the Mislata Court of Instruction on duty, where he was given an imprisonment order.

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First aid training to local police is signed by the Dénia Council and Benidorm Hospital Clinic

Vicent Grimalt, the mayor of Dénia, and Ana Vasbinder, the director of the Benidorm Clinical Hospital, signed a cooperation agreement this Tuesday to plan training exercises for the Local Police in the areas of accident or health-related assistance, prevention, and first aid.

The technical tools required for the training, including a mock defibrillator and a dummy to simulate resuscitation techniques, were also supplied by the Benidorm Clinic Hospital, which has operated in Dénia for three years.

The first term of this arrangement will be four years.

The materials “will be used immediately in the road safety and first aid classes” that the force conducts in the city’s schools, according to Jovi Estruch, Chief Superintendent of the Dénia Local Police. Additionally, the first course that will be offered as a result of this partnership with the HCB is already planned for June.

This partnership with Dénia City Council and the Local Police “is an obligation, but also an honour, in response to the warm welcome we have received from the public,” said Ana Vasbinder, who is also the director of Institutional Relations at Benidorm Clinical Hospital.

“One of our goals as a company is to be part of the social network in the communities where we work, so being able to help police officers improve their care of people is a commitment for us ,” Vasbinder said.

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The health centre’s director further underlined that “their actions can often save lives” because the local police are frequently the first emergency services to arrive at an accident scene.

The Benidorm Clinical Hospital was recognised by the mayor for its participation “in this and many other municipal initiatives related to health and sport.”


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A measure supporting the fishing industry is unanimously approved by the Torrevieja Council

Torrevieja Town Hall

As part of the processing of the new European Regulation on the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP), Rosario Martínez Chazarra, spokesperson for the Popular Party Municipal Group, presented a motion in favour of the fishing industry, which the Ordinary Plenary Session of Torrevieja City Council approved on urgent grounds on Monday, March 31st. All political parties represented in the City Council (PP, PSOE, VOX, and Sueña Torrevieja) unanimously accepted the resolution.

The urgency is justified by the fact that the European Commission is now holding a public involvement procedure for the CFP regulation’s wording, and the administrative bodies of Member States have until April 21st, 2025, to submit their recommendations.

In Torrevieja, the fishing industry has a significant socioeconomic impact. Because of its significance as a food supply, its long history in the city, its close ties to generations of Torrevieja people, and its role in the landscape and economic activities of our municipality, it is a vital and crucial sector.

In order to guarantee the sustainability of EU fisheries from an environmental, economic, and social standpoint, the Common Fisheries Policy underwent its most recent update in 2013.

In addition to the implementation of other complementary measures like enhanced selectivity, closed areas, and seasons, among others, there has been a notable decrease in fishing effort, which has reached over 40% of fishing days. The Artisanal Coastal Fishing Fleet of the Valencian Community caught 25% more in 2024 than the year before. Between 2023 and 2024, the catch grew from 15,000 tonnes valued at €81.1 million to 19,035 tonnes valued at €94.3 million. It is clear that the Torrevieja fish market played a major role in reaching these catch values.

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Despite these numbers, our municipality’s fishing vessels are in a precarious position as a result of recent Council of the European Union decisions that cut the number of fishing days to just 27 annually. This action renders the city’s fishing industry, which creates a significant number of direct and indirect jobs, unviable, despite its enormous social value.

As fishermen in the Valencian Community gathered 150,000 tonnes of trash, mostly plastic, from the Mediterranean Sea last year alone, Mediterranean fishing has substantial ecological and environmental value in our sea in addition to being a major economic, tourism, cultural, and culinary asset for our municipality.

In plenary, it was decided that the appropriate body would encourage the Spanish government to ask the European Commission for all of these reasons:

  • A 25% increase in catches was made possible by the extension of the fishing season to 133 days.
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  • Since the catch of almost 200 species cannot be dependent on criteria specified for just one, as is the case with hake, there should be greater transparency when determining the criterion for ongoing fishing.
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  • Enhance and broaden the standards used to assess the true fishing stock of the entire group of species.
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  • When making significant judgements, the industry should be considered, and these decisions should be made quickly. Their way of life cannot be drastically altered annually by a political decision made in December with little warning. Since fishing is also a business activity and should be subject to the same foresight as other economic activities, the procedures for changing the number of fishing days should be made public beforehand, and the regulated term should be 10 or five years.
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  • That the time horizon for reaching maximum sustainable performance beyond 2030 should be delayed by limiting the margins of change to no more than 5 to 10% per year rather than the current 70% reduction.
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  • Since this rule was designed for Atlantic fisheries, not Mediterranean fisheries, it is necessary to remove the requirement to land fish that are unsuited for sale.
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  • Additionally, scientists with expertise in the Mediterranean should implement the Fisheries Commission’s internal recommendations.

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