Overview
- Investigative journalist Richard Apolo said Martínez served as legal representative for several Farfán companies and cited a May 2025 notarial letter seeking to revoke that power, with the current status unspecified.
- Apolo also described alleged recordings in which Farfán told Martínez’s wife that he had confessed to the crime, a claim presented as reported audio rather than court-validated evidence.
- Lawyers for both sides publicly rejected rumors of a romantic relationship between Martínez and the 19-year-old complainant, calling the theory unfounded.
- Farfán’s legal team displayed bank vouchers to show continued deposits to Martínez’s family, while Martínez’s attorney characterized those payments as suggestive of a guilty conscience, presenting it as his view.
- Following the new disclosures, Farfán limited comments on his Instagram account, and the criminal case proceeds after Martínez’s late-August release for lack of conclusive proof.