The paparazzi claims that the actress pointed it out directly and as a result of it, her bodyguard beat her.
The incident in which Margot Robbie and Cara Delevingne were involved last weekend in Buenos Aires continues to offer news that, to a certain extent, modify the original story that media outlets such as The Sun and TMZ initially offered.
Initially it was reported that the producer Josey McNamara and the technician Jac Hopkins, frequent collaborators of the Australian actress, were the only ones responsible for the attack suffered by Pedro Orquera, but the photographer now accused Robbie of having ordered his bodyguards to They will beat him.
The paparazzi appeared before the judge this week, as did McNamara and Hopkins last Sunday, who spent the night of the events in jail. According to her testimony, the interpreter touched the shoulder of one of her employees and then pointed her finger at Orquera.
At that moment, according to his version of events, the fight broke out that ended with the photographer in the hospital suffering from several fractures.
"Numerous people began to hit me and the chase began. I remember that they hit me again and I fell to the ground very hard. If I had fallen on my head, I could have died," said Orquera, 61, after identifying Margot Robbie as the alleged instigator of the event.
The photographer did not refer to Cara Delevingne at any time, since he did not recognize her in the midst of the tumult.
The Sun newspaper spoke with Pedro Orquera's lawyer, Matías Morla, about the crimes that could be attributed to Margot Robbie if the magistrate grants sufficient credibility to his client's statement, who has also not made direct mention of McNamara and Hopkins , despite the fact that they both accompanied the two friends on their night out in the La Boca neighborhood.
"She sent them to beat him. She shares the blame because she directed them against the photographer. We are going to ask the judge to charge her as a co-participant in the attack. She should not be considered a mere witness, but one of the accused who has to give explanations," Morla revealed in his brief conversation with the British newspaper.