Public opinion reacted with indignation and the sympathy that it had shown towards the Civil Guard after the events in
Castilblanco turned into hostility, because it was not the first time that the Civil Guard had fired at point-blank range. In the
Parliament, opposition deputies called for the immediate dismissal of the general director of the Civil Guard,
general Sanjurjo. But a month later, the government gave in to the pressure and replaced him with
general Cabanellas, and Sanjurjo went on to lead the
Carabineros Corps, which Sanjurjo interpreted as disavowal and degradation by the government (five months later he would lead the
first coup attempt to overthrow the
Republic). In the conversation that Sanjurjo had with the President of the Government,
Manuel Azaña, in which the latter informed him of his dismissal as director of the Civil Guard, Sanjurjo did not speak of the atrocities committed by his subordinates in Arnedo, but instead blamed the “socialist town halls”, where “the worst of each house” had gotten into, “undesirable” people who “encourage disorder, intimidate owners, cause damage to properties and necessarily clash with the Civil Guard”. The socialists, Sanjurjo told Azaña, should not be in the government, "because their presence encourages those who favor excesses". The military court that on January 30, 1934, tried in
Burgos the lieutenant of the Civil Guard who gave the order to shoot in Arnedo acquitted him "of the crime of homicide and injuries due to reckless negligence due to lack of sufficient evidence to appreciate what he had committed" noting that " the same circumstance exists with respect to charges on the Civil Guard force under his orders". == References ==