The Court of Misdemeanors in Ras Al Khaimah began the trial of a Gulf girl, accused of participating with an Asian defendant working in a wedding hall, to transfer the recordings of surveillance cameras installed in the wedding hall, during the wedding of her brother, without the consent of the competent authorities and procedures for security technology systems, to prove that her mother was beaten Before her brother's divorced.

The defendant confessed before the court to the transfer of surveillance cameras in the wedding hall, to prove that her mother was beaten by her brother, who came to the wedding hall during the wedding of her brother, and violated the physical integrity of her mother.

She explained that she did not intend to commit the crime, but transferred the recordings of surveillance cameras in the wedding hall, and gave it to her brother to open a communication against his ex-husband who assaulted the safety of their mother in front of the wedding hall, pointing out that she did not know the legal procedures that must be followed to get the video clip from the wedding hall.

The defendant stated that he had met the defendant's request to transfer the recordings from the surveillance cameras, without being aware of the legal penalties involved.

For his part, the defense lawyer for the defendant, Abdullah Sarhan, during his plead before the court, to the absence of the criminal intent of the crime, explaining that what prompted his client to commit the crime, the brother of her brother to come to the wedding hall during the wedding of her husband, to fabricate problems, where Her brother beat her mother, threatened her and insulted her.

He added that it was consistent from the case papers that the content of the video was not promoted or published until it is punished according to the indictment filed by the prosecution against his client, demanding the court acquitted his client of the charges against her, based on the absence of the criminal intent of the crime, and the court set, next Sunday, a date To pronounce the verdict in the case.