Ignored audios place Cospedal in Operation Catalonia

A recorded conversation between María Dolores de Cospedal and José Manuel Villarejo reveals her awareness of police payments to Victoria Álvarez and infiltration in the Mossos d'Esquadra, days before the 1-O referendum in 2017. Judge Manuel García Castellón ignored these audios for two years, according to a police report. Operation Catalonia, part of the dirty war against independence, remains largely uninvestigated.

On September 12, 2017, weeks before the 1-O independence referendum, María Dolores de Cospedal, then PP secretary general and defense minister, met with commissioner José Manuel Villarejo at the party's headquarters in Genoa, Madrid. The one-hour-and-two-minute recording captures Villarejo seeking Cospedal's help amid pressures from the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office and Sepblac. She promises to intervene: “I will talk to Guindos and I will talk to the Prosecutor's Office”.

The discussion turns to maneuvers against the Catalan procés. Villarejo refers to “Vicky”, meaning Victoria Álvarez, ex-partner of Jordi Pujol Ferrusola, who continues receiving payments from police reserved funds. “If they detect that Vicky is being paid by the Police, we'll have a mess, don't you think?”, Villarejo asks. Cospedal replies: “Yes, indeed”. Álvarez and Javier de la Rosa, convicted in the Pujol case, received these payments since 2013, when Villarejo was involved in the confession that launched the corruption probe against the Pujol family.

Cospedal also mentions informants in the Mossos d'Esquadra paid with reserved funds and boasts about dismissing the deputy operational directors (DAO) of Police and Civil Guard from the Fernández Díaz era. “What it cost me to get the DAOs changed…”, she says, noting it's a secret her influence over the Interior Ministry under Juan Ignacio Zoido.

These audios, part of piece 32 in the Villarejo case at the National Court, were ignored by Judge García Castellón despite a 2023 police report linking them to the Kitchen case. Operation Catalonia, exposed in 2014, involves espionage and setups against independence figures like Artur Mas and Xavier Trías, but has not progressed in judicial probes. Only Eugenio Pino has been convicted for attempting to introduce illicit evidence in the Pujol case. Piece 32 has acted as an archive for unprosecuted leads, leaving potential crimes tied to the PP's 'political brigade' unpunished.

Artikel Terkait

Mariano Rajoy testifying in Operación Kitchen trial courtroom, with María Dolores de Cospedal and judge present.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Rajoy and Cospedal to testify Thursday in ongoing Operación Kitchen trial

Dilaporkan oleh AI Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Former Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy and ex-PP Secretary General María Dolores de Cospedal will testify this Thursday as witnesses in the ongoing Operación Kitchen trial at Spain's Audiencia Nacional in San Fernando de Henares. Rajoy opens the session, followed by Cospedal, amid restrictions by investigating judge Manuel García Castellón. Recent PP-linked witnesses have reported memory lapses.

Mariano Rajoy and María Dolores de Cospedal testified in the Kitchen case trial at the Audiencia Nacional, defending the legality of the police operation against Luis Bárcenas. Their accounts clash with agents' testimonies and summary evidence. The trial, in its third week, continues with more statements.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Spain's National Court in San Fernando de Henares opened the Operación Kitchen trial on Monday, investigating a 2013 parapolice operation under Mariano Rajoy's government to spy on former PP treasurer Luis Bárcenas and steal compromising PP documents amid the Gürtel case. Ten ex-officials, including former Interior Minister Jorge Fernández Díaz, face up to 15-year sentences from Anticorruption Prosecutors. Defenses challenge jurisdiction and evidence, while current PP leaders distance the party and PSOE seeks to impute María Dolores de Cospedal and the PP.

In the latest session of Spain's Supreme Court trial over the Koldo mask scandal—following testimonies from Víctor de Aldama and Koldo García—former Transport Minister José Luis Ábalos denied all corruption charges on May 4, 2026. Anticorruption prosecutors refused to further cut collaborator Aldama's penalty, while the PP reduced its request to avoid prison for him.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Víctor de Aldama, key businessman in the masks plot, testified on Wednesday in Spain's Supreme Court that the PSOE was illegally financed with cash from construction firms and that Pedro Sánchez knew about it. Ábalos and Koldo García recruited him to collect funds, according to his statement. The testimony is part of the masks case trial but addresses a secret probe at the National Court.

Francisca Paqui Muñoz, wife of former PSOE Organization Secretary Santos Cerdán, appeared before a Senate commission investigating the Koldo case but invoked her right not to testify due to her husband's investigation and requested to leave for health reasons, which was denied. For nearly two hours, she remained absorbed in her mobile phone as opposition senators questioned her links to Servinabar company and expenses it covered. The commission president reproached her discourtesy at the end.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Interior minister Núria Parlon and Mossos director Josep Lluís Trapero admitted on Wednesday before parliament the operational error in sending two undercover agents into a teachers assembly. They offered apologies and announced an internal investigation along with regulatory changes.

 

 

 

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak