

As the world falls apart, we read in the NOW that Two caregivers have defrauded the grandmother they were caring for.The woman "decided to give one of them powers of attorney so she could carry out banking transactions," and with these powers, the process involved clearing her savings account. The money obtained was for noble purposes. The Mossos d'Esquadra say they sent part of it to their country of origin (I assume to the family) and underwent cosmetic surgery. They also invested in security cameras to know when the victim went shopping and thus smooth over her account later. I suppose the notary, on the day of the signing, must have found the whole thing quite normal.
In any case, this crime has an aesthetic component that makes it much more empowering. Until now, we knew that the heroic criminal El Dioni, who stole an armored van and went to Brazil (his Ithaca) to live life to the fullest, had had "a few touch-ups." Specifically, he had surgery on his cross-eye. He showed the result on the Sardà program, Martian Chronicles, where he's going to destroy his face live. That day he was wearing one of his wigs (he was bald), because hair trips to Turkey were still years away.
The fact that these two women have decided to invest in cosmetic surgery also means that equality is slowly coming to the world of scammers. I want to think that the poor woman who hired them and trusted them saw them every day and said: "Oh, girl, I don't know what you've done to yourself, but I liked you better before." I mean, in honor of the poor grandmother, I hope and pray that the doctor who touched them up wasn't one of the good ones, but one of the others. Maybe it was, who knows, Leticia Sabater's.