The death of Albert Solá Last Saturday at the age of 66, he shocked his family and friends, including Kiko Matamoros. He was well acquainted with the emeritus’s illegitimate son, whom he represented years ago to help tell his story on television. Precisely on Saturday he had to go to the set of the program Who is my father? to reveal unpublished data about his alleged affiliation with Don Juan Carlos and Matamoros believes that his death, 24 hours earlier, is too much of a coincidence: “There are methods of murder that you do not detect”has said in Save me.
Also read: Albert Solà, the supposed son of the emeritus king, dies the day he was going to tell his story on Telecinco
“Years ago I closed it for a TV show, but in the end they wouldn’t let us come. He would be under surveillance and would press where they had to press so that he would not appear,” Matamoros explained. “There is a lot of information that comes out of former CNI agents that cannot be transferred publicly. I have brought a dossier that involves heads of state, I brought a topic that was leaked from there, with information and files… He was always convinced that he was the son of who he was the son of and there is talk of DNA tests,” he said. “This man has been investigated from top to bottom.”
Investigation and autopsy
I only had 66 years and he was healthy, so nobody can explain why on Saturday, when he left work as a waiter, he fell dead on the floor in a friend’s bar. “He ordered a glass of wine and on the way to the table where his friend was waiting for him, he collapsed. He didn’t have time to try it,” witnesses have told The country. The Court of First Instance and Instruction 3 of Bisbal d’Empordà (Girona) is investigating what happened and the magistrate has requested an autopsy of the body, although everything points to a natural death.
Albert Solá was born in Barcelona in 1956 and was raised in an adoptive family. He always defended that King Juan Carlos had a relationship with his biological mother, a young woman from the Catalan upper bourgeoisie named Anna María Bach Ramon, many years before becoming king. The deceased maintained until his death that he was the eldest son of King Juan Carlos I and brother on the father’s side of the current king, Felipe VI. He spent years trying to prove his filial relationship, but in 2015 the Supreme Court did not admit his paternity claim. He appealed the decision to the Constitutional Court, although he did not accept his appeal for protection either.
In December 2019 they met some DNA resultsaccording to which there was a 99.9% genetic match between the two, some tests carried out in 2007, according to Solá himself, by order of the CNI. That year he was interviewed on the Telecinco program Viva la vida. “In 2007, the director general of the CNI in Barcelona personally proposed that I carry out these analyses. It was through a former member of the CNI with whom I had contact, Antonio Rodríguez. They came from Barcelona to do it. In front of me they called their colleagues in Madrid and asked for a favor and that it be as quickly as possible: to send them any object used by the king (Juan Carlos I). In the end, they sent a glass directly to the laboratory in Lérida where the analyzes would be carried out, “he said then.