San José, October 14, 2020.- In the Judgment notified today in the Case of Acosta Martínez et al. v. Argentina, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights accepted the full acknowledgment of responsibility made by Argentina and, therefore, found Argentina responsible for the violation of the rights to life, personal integrity, personal liberty, equality and non-discrimination of Mr. José Delfín Acosta Martínez. Likewise, it also considered the State's responsibility for the violation of personal integrity, judicial guarantees and judicial protection of their next of kin. Consequently, the Court concluded that Argentina was responsible for the violation of Articles 4.1 (right to life), 5.1 (right to humane treatment), 5.2 (absolute prohibition to torture or to cruel, inhuman, or degrading punishment or treatment), 7.2, 7.3, 7.4 (right to personal to personal liberty and its guarantees) and 24 (right to equal protection) of the Convention, in relation to Articles 1.1 (obligation to respect rights) and 2 (domestic legal effects) of the same instrument to the detriment of José Delfín Acosta Martínez, as well as the violation of Articles 5.1, 8.1 (right to a fair trial) and 25.1 (judicial protection) of the Convention, in relation to Article 1.1 of the same instrument to the detriment of his mother, Blanca Rosa Martínez, and his brother, Ángel Acosta Martínez.