Courtroom illustration of Begoña Gómez's trial where Manos Limpias seeks over 10 years in prison for influence peddling.
Courtroom illustration of Begoña Gómez's trial where Manos Limpias seeks over 10 years in prison for influence peddling.
Billede genereret af AI

Manos Limpias seeks over 10 years in prison for Begoña Gómez in ongoing case

Billede genereret af AI

In the latest development in the legal case against Begoña Gómez, wife of Spain's PM Pedro Sánchez, the group Manos Limpias has requested more than 10 years in prison for her on influence peddling and embezzlement charges, following Judge Peinado's recent proposal for a jury trial. It also seeks over two years for businessman Juan Carlos Barrabés. Gómez's defense accuses the judge of rights violations by advancing without resolving appeals.

Following Judge Juan Carlos Peinado's April 2026 ruling proposing a jury trial for Begoña Gómez on embezzlement, influence peddling, business corruption, and misappropriation—linked to her role in a Complutense University chair and related business activities—the far-right group Manos Limpias filed an accusation brief on Friday seeking over 10 years in prison for Gómez on continued influence peddling and public funds embezzlement.

Manos Limpias alleges Gómez used her position as Pedro Sánchez's wife to influence the university's creation of the Chair for Competitive Social Transformation, which she co-directed (unpaid from 2020, after earning ~40,000 euros in prior roles since 2012), extracting software for private commercialization worth ~15,000 euros. They also claim she issued recommendation letters aiding Barrabés's firm in EU-funded Red.es tenders.

The brief requests two years and three months for Barrabés on influence peddling, noting potential prevarication in Gómez's appointment but deeming it untimely now.

Gómez's defense, led by Antonio Camacho, counters by accusing Peinado of 'abnormally accelerated' proceedings, creating defenselessness by not resolving an appeal against the jury procedure, thus violating effective judicial protection and judicial review rights.

Hvad folk siger

X discussions highlight strong support from right-leaning users for Manos Limpias' request of over 10 years in prison for Begoña Gómez on influence peddling and embezzlement charges, with some deeming the penalty too lenient. Defenders accuse Judge Peinado of violating rights by advancing the case without resolving appeals, viewed skeptically by opponents as delay tactics. Journalists detail the prosecution's demands and procedural disputes.

Relaterede artikler

Courtroom illustration depicting Judge Peinado's indictment of Begoña Gómez, wife of Spanish PM Pedro Sánchez, on four corruption charges, with key figures and Beijing reference.
Billede genereret af AI

Judge Peinado indicts Begoña Gómez on four charges

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

Judge Juan Carlos Peinado has ended the two-year probe into Begoña Gómez, wife of Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, proposing a jury trial for influence peddling, business corruption, misappropriation and embezzlement. The 39-page ruling also sends adviser Cristina Álvarez and businessman Juan Carlos Barrabés to the bench. Gómez learned of it in Beijing during her husband's official trip.

Judge Juan Carlos Peinado informed parties in the Begoña Gómez case that any trial would be before a jury. Defenses for the wife of the Spanish prime minister, her advisor Cristina Álvarez, and businessman Juan Carlos Barrabés demanded dismissal of the case, as did the prosecution. Accusing parties called for further inquiries.

Rapporteret af AI

Spain's Supreme Court has upheld but reduced to two years and one month the prison sentence of Francisco Nicolás Gómez Iglesias, known as Pequeño Nicolás, for active bribery and disclosure of secrets—his third firm conviction. The cut from over four years, due to 13 years of undue judicial delays, means no individual penalty exceeds two years, allowing his defense to seek suspension considering his total penalties.

On the second day of the masks case trial at Spain's Supreme Court—following initial testimonies from family members denying corruption involvement—witnesses detailed the hirings of Claudia Montes, friend of former minister José Luis Ábalos, and Jésica Rodríguez, Ábalos's ex-partner, in companies under the Transport Ministry. Montes admitted reading train books during work hours, while accounts highlighted unexcused absences and ministerial interventions.

Rapporteret af AI

Following the Prosecutor's request after a decade-long probe, Judge Fredy Peña Ávila has fully absolved David Andrés Cangrejo Torres and 11 others in the alleged electoral corruption case at Neiva's ESE Carmen Emilia Ospina, citing insufficient evidence to overcome the presumption of innocence.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis