Overview
- Sokol said on International Women’s Day that De Llano has yet to issue the public apology or fulfill the economic reparations mandated by Mexico’s Supreme Court.
- Mexico’s Primera Sala ordered the apology and a monetary payment to be donated to an institution defending minors, and in June 2025 it denied De Llano’s amparo, confirming the sentence.
- Sokol reported that De Llano has argued an apology would “revictimize” her, a rationale she rejected as prolonging the harm and evading judicial obligations.
- She emphasized that a public acknowledgment is essential to “stabilize the truth,” stressing that legal victory alone is insufficient without compliance.
- The case, initiated by Sokol’s 2022 accusation and backed by two lower-court wins, has set a precedent that civil prescription does not bar claims arising from child sexual abuse.