A couple of days ago, Fabricio Vasconcelos was in the spotlight due to an altercation he had at the condominium where he lives with his wife, Mariela Román, and their two daughters in the Colina commune. According to the information released by Cecilia Gutiérrez, the Brazilian dancer "was involved in a fight that ended with one person injured, a police report filed, and a medical examination at a clinic in the eastern sector. " "The nature of the place, with speed bumps and speed limits, meant he was driving slower.

Fabricio was entering behind and started to rush, trying to squeeze his car past, which led to a verbal confrontation. But this confrontation escalated until it turned physical," the journalist stated. Later, Fabricio defended himself in a conversation with LUN, asserting, "This person attacked me in my home in front of my daughter.

That's why I made that public statement, because it's the complete opposite; it comes out that I committed an assault, and this is another thing: I am not the aggressor, I am the victim. " "A person hit me inside my house; he had already parked his car halfway on my sidewalk, and someone didn't like that I passed him 10 meters from my house... he got out of his car hitting mine and cursing.

I was with my 15-year-old daughter (in the vehicle) witnessing this without understanding anything. I rolled down the window, he spat at me, I closed it and panicked. He, seeing my hand on the door, hit it and closed it (squeezing it).

As I got out of the car, he was hitting me with my daughter (watching) at the gate and my dogs there," he recounted. "W…

His girlfriend got out of the car and also started hitting me. I insist, all in front of my daughter from the window inside my house. I backed away, managed to get my truck in; the gate was open, and I drove it fully into the property, and then he took a stick from his trunk and hit my truck while I was parking it.

He told me he was going to kill me, that he was going to kill my dogs," the Brazilian insisted. In this context, on Tuesday, the dancer's wife, Mariela Román, exploded through a message she shared on social media, where she criticized the press for going to her daughters' school to talk to Fabricio about the situation. "As a mother and guardian, I express my strongest rejection of the presence of media outlets near my minor daughters' educational establishment, which have attempted to obtain interviews with an adult who is simply fulfilling his role as a father by picking them up from school," she stated in a message posted on Instagram.

In the same vein, she added: "I believe that this practice undermines the tranquility and safety of the school environment, unnecessarily exposing students and affecting the normal development of their educational activities. The educational establishment is a protected space, intended exclusively for the formation and well-being of children, and it should not become a stage for media pressures under any circumstances. " "Furthermore, the presence of journalists at the entrance of the establishment hinders free movement and the right of other guardians to exercise their parental role without obstacles or external pressures, which constitutes an additional violation of fundamental rights, compromising the safety and privacy of students," she continued.

Román even went further and warned about the possibility of initiating some type of legal action. She referred to current regulations (Law No. 20.

370, Law No. 19. 628, and the Convention on the Rights of the Child).

"Such behaviors can lead to potential civil, administrative (actions before the National Television Council and the Transparency Council), and ethical (disciplinary sanctions from the Chilean Journalists' Association) consequences, which I am willing to pursue if necessary," she indicated. "Any journalistic approach must be conducted outside the school environment and with the corresponding authorizations, thus avoiding the undue exposure of my daughters and the hindrance of other guardians. I demand due respect for the dignity of families...

and for the right of minors to grow and learn in a safe environment, free from external intrusions," she concluded.