Magaly Medina refuted Pamela Franco's alleged script in an interview: “It sold itself there, don't be a liar”

Magaly Medina refuted Pamela Franco’s alleged script in an interview: “It sold itself there, don’t be a liar”

The case of the 280 sole yape explodes: audios, oaths and new accusations against Pamela Franco. Infobae Peru / Capture TV – Magaly TV La Firme

The recent interview of Pamela Franco with Verónica Linares rekindled a story that seemed closed, but that reemerged with more strength after the critical analysis carried out by Magaly Medinawho assured that the singer tries to “reconstruct” the events to present herself as a victim.

The journalist opened the debate by recalling that, in her version, Pamela states that when she sat down two years ago on the set of Maria Pia Copellowhich he said “was part of a script.”

Magaly harshly questioned this version and described it as an attempt to sweeten reality: “It’s like when you transform history in your own way to make it look more beautiful. Now it turns out that everything she said was scripted, that they forced her, that if not, she would lose her job. Don’t tell me,” she said.

From the report of its program it was also emphasized that, a few months after the two years of the famous yape of 280 soles and the call of Pamela LopezFranco would have tried to “turn the tables.”

In the interview, the cumbiambera explained that she swore by her daughter because she was emotionally devastated and medicated after her breakup with Domínguez. According to what she said, she took the call from López without sleeping and in the middle of a crisis: “I heard them tell me ‘if you knew him, you knew him’, and I only managed to say ‘I’m asking about him’. I hadn’t had contact with that person for almost five years. Why did I have to say something different?”, she said.

However, the audio that was released at the time contradicts his version. In it, you hear Pamela Lopez Ask him directly: “Where do you know my husband from and why is he making you a transfer of 280 soles?”

Franco responded by denying everything and took the oath that he now regrets: “I tell you this for my daughter“I have nothing to do with it,” he said then. López reminded him not to involve the minor: “Don’t involve your daughter, please.”

For Magaly, Franco’s current explanation—who claims that he did not swear to meet Cueva, but rather to deny a New Year that did not happen—does not match the serene and articulate tone she had on the call. “At that moment I was not doped. I was hungover, pumped, that’s what the father of my children told me,” Medina said. He even remembered that Domínguez confessed to him that the famous yape was for “his little chela box.”

Magaly also refuted the version about the supposed “script” that she would have received in Send Who Sends. He recalled that Pamela openly accepted having been “the other” for two years, even knowing that Cueva was a married man with children. “Just because a program has a list of questions does not mean that they give you a script to incriminate you,” he pointed out.

But Pamela insisted in said interview that, after the emotional pressure of the moment, she ended up saying things that she did not feel represented her. He noted that in his current relationship with Cueva he has seen positive changes in him:

“No one changes for another person. One changes because he no longer wants the same thing for himself. I do feel that he has improved,” he expressed, trying to show a more mature version of the player. She added that she wants him to find stability, not for her, but for her children and the family she believes he should still value and support.