Puerto Rican singer Manny Manuel suffered a second car accident on Thursday after having another this past morning.
The second accident took place in the direction of Guaynabo, a town near San Juan, in Bayamón, when he lost control of his car and collided with a concrete fence, the island’s police said today.
The artist is stablee.
Security forces have indicated that a call through the 911 Emergency System alerted authorities to the facts.
Previously, Manuel suffered on Thursday morning a car accident when it collided with a lighting pole when he was driving in the opposite direction and in an “apparent” state of intoxication in the town of Joncs (east).
Puerto Rican police reported that the incident occurred on the PR-30 in the east-west Ceiba neighborhood of Joncs when he lost control of his vehicle while driving in the opposite direction of traffic and he ended up crashing into the stick.
After the events he was taken in an ambulance in stable condition to the Mennonita Hospital in Caguas.
Manny Manuel made headlines last November after being found in “poor condition” inside his vehicle, on a street in the island’s capital.
Manny Manuel’s public problems started on February 24, 2019 in Spain, when he was performing during the carnival of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria and was expelled from the stage due to his physical condition.
After the event in Spain, the artist spent some time reflecting and analyzing some changes in his life.
On December 10, the Puerto Rican said that his sexual orientation has put unbearable pressure on him over the years, from school to his own musical team, which has already been removed. about.
“I’m at peace, calm, without any conscience,” said Manny Manuel in an interview with the newspaper Primera Hora, in which he acknowledged that for decades he did not dare to talk about anything related to his sexual orientation, both for the pressure he would have put on his public figure as a singer as well as for everything around him, starting with his father.
Manny Manuel’s confession was then celebrated by human rights activist and leader of the LGBTTIQ + community in Puerto Rico Pedro Julio Serrano.