Scandal || At least three young people facing charges of buying their 12th year (A level equivalent) exams have passed through medical school and are now practising as doctors in state hospitals.
This latest twist to a bizarre story going back years was made this week by national tabloid Correio da ManhĂŁ, reporting on the ongoing court case of 56-year-old teacher DĂlia Pinto and 35 former âretakeâ pupils of Lisbonâs former Externato Alfa college.
The 36 defendants face various charges of fraud and falsification of documents.
According to CM, in some cases pupils did not attend classes or even sit their exams. They simply paid up front.
One âbig nameâ in the scandal is that of aristocrat Vasco Holstein de Melo, 35, a descendant of the Count of Murça, who only last week left Sintra jail where he had been serving a five-year sentence for drug smuggling.
De Melo is now back before beaks in a case that highlights just how slowly Portuguese âjusticeâ can take to unfold.
The dirty dealings at Externato Alfa brought the college to its knees in 2007, but it took another seven years before the case made it to court.
According to the public prosecutor, DĂlia Pinto forged teachersâ signatures, launched results and gave false âequivalĂȘnciasâ – which means she used the fraud to help students get placements outside the country in universities that asked for grade-equivalents of their qualifications.
Currently facing 44 crimes of document falsification, Pinto is said to have made âŹ380,000 through the scam – sometimes charging ârepeatâ pupils as much as âŹ2,500 to forge results.
âPayment was made almost always in cash,â wrote CM, âand then deposited in seven different bank accounts.â
The whistle was blown, the paper continues, in 2000 when an Economy teacher noticed her name had been attributed to results that she had never given.
Later, in 2013, DCIAP criminal investigators received another complaint – though by this time, DĂlia Pinto was âlong goneâ from her position as coordinator for ârepeat educationâ, in this case meaning education for students sitting exams for a second time at the college.
As the case is finally heard in Lisbonâs Varas Criminais, CM says that three of the students on trial have passed through medical college, finished their degrees and âat this momentâ are doctors in public hospitals âfrom the north to the south of the countryâ.
CM writes that it âtried to contactâ Vasco Holstein de Melo âwithout successâ.