If the Ministry for Justice had not extended Inmaculada Núñez contract, the Malaya case could have come to a standstill. The Malaya case, investigating the corruption in Marbella Town Hall, opened in Málaga in September 2010. A possible obstacle which could have complicated the case considerably was solved on Wednesday when the Justice Ministry said they were extending the services of the judicial secretary who has been working exclusively on the case, Inmaculada Núñez, who original contract was set to expire on April 30. President of the Málaga court, José Godino, announced the renovation of the contract after the session on Wednesday. Meanwhile the businessman Tomás Olivo, one of the accused in the Malaya case, has been condemned to five years prison for ill-treating his ex girlfriend, with whom he had a baby daughter. Penal Court 13 in Málaga heard how he had installed cameras in the home so he could watch events when he was not there. Tomás Olivo, who is the owner of the La Cañada Commercial Centre in Marbella, is considered to have acted against his ex with ‘humiliation, aggression and control’ during the relationship and after they broke up. He has been found guilty on three counts of ill-treatment in the family environment, one of them regular abuse. The sentence says that since 2003 and until the start of 2006 he ill-treated the woman by ‘insulting her, pushing her, hitting her, telling her how she should dress, and questioning marks on her body which he thought showed that she had been in contact with another man. He also locked her in the house.
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