Overview
- Magaly Medina, who confirmed late Friday she had filed an administrative complaint with the Lima Bar Association against Iván Paredes, also said authorities opened a procedure over the protective order due to a notification error she claims affected her.
- The Lima Prefecture granted Yahaira Plasencia personal guarantees on Thursday, an administrative protective measure that orders Medina to stop conduct described as psychological violence and warns that violating it could trigger a charge of resisting or disobeying authority.
- Medina pushed back on her show, rejecting the decision and alleging that Paredes, her former lawyer and now Plasencia’s counsel, is trying to extort her with videos while, she says, falsely telling authorities she issued death threats.
- Paredes publicly argued he can defend himself by disclosing private chats, asserted that the oral trial for Plasencia’s aggravated‑defamation case is slated for May 12, and said he is seeking 1.5 million soles in damages and a 4.5‑year sentence.
- The feud widened after a TV program aired a document it said came from the Public Prosecutor’s Office seeking an extortion probe of Plasencia’s partner, Luis Fernando Rodríguez, which Plasencia dismissed on camera before ending the interview.