
The Romanian court declined Andrew Tate’s plea to be set free, meaning that he will stay in custody.
Romanian Court Rejects Andrew Tate’s Plea To Be Set Free
This means Tate, alongside his brother Tristan Tate, will remain detained for thirty days following allegations of organised crime, human trafficking and rape. Their attorney took the Bucharest court to task by attempting to have them liberated, but it was to no avail.
The two brothers had arrived with two other suspects, Luana Radu and Georgiana Naghel, to court. And now that the dust has settled down, Tate’s attorney Eugene Vidineac has not been best pleased by the verdict.
In his comments, he said: “I’m very disappointed with the court decision. It seems excessive to me. The court warrant means they will stay in custody the full 30-days until the end of January and then we will look again.
“I will speak with my clients in the morning and we will decide what the best way forward is but they will be as disappointed as me.” A representative of Romania’s anti-organised crime office (DIICOT), Ramona Bolla, reported that the court denied a plea by Tate to reverse a decision that prolonged his detention to 30 days.
In the appeal, his lawyer insisted that both Tate siblings had children in Romania and should be released to look after them. Andrew was obscure about the exact number of kids he has had, but stated in an interview with the Times in September the following: “I am certain I will have more children than 99.9 percent of the population of the western world. Double digit children.
“And they all adore me.” The social media response was damning. A certain subset of critics began to troll Andrew in light of the fact that he came across as arrogant. One person wrote: “Well at least he can’t get chinned in prison, he has that going for him.”
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