Illustration of the Supreme Court corruption trial involving Ábalos, with prosecutor presenting fiscal report.
Illustration of the Supreme Court corruption trial involving Ábalos, with prosecutor presenting fiscal report.
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Trial of Ábalos concludes with damning fiscal report

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The first trial linked to corruption in Pedro Sánchez’s government concluded Wednesday at the Supreme Court. Chief anti-corruption prosecutor Alejandro Luzón spent one hour and forty minutes denouncing a criminal organization that operated from the Ministry of Transport.

Luzón described a network of bribes and influence peddling that included mask contracts, public-sector jobs and monthly payments of 10,000 euros. He called the corruption “organic, organized and sustained” and said it “is eating away at our democratic system.”

José Luis Ábalos and his former aide Koldo García used their right to the last word. Ábalos portrayed himself as the victim of a predetermined “general cause” and denied any wrongdoing in two contracts. Koldo García said he only wanted to “help” and declared himself “destroyed.”

Businessman Víctor de Aldama, accused of paying the bribes, received the prosecutor’s backing for a possible further sentence reduction due to his cooperation. Court president Concepción Arrieta closed the trial at 21:23 with the words “visto para sentencia.”

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Initial reactions on X to the Ábalos trial conclusion center on prosecutor Alejandro Luzón's report describing a criminal organization led by Ábalos in the Transport Ministry, with debate over whether it shields Sánchez or exposes broader corruption. Users express outrage at perceived politicized justice, skepticism toward the fiscal's findings, and calls for accountability or dimisión.

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José Luis Ábalos testifying and denying charges in Spain's Supreme Court Koldo mask scandal trial.
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Ábalos denies all charges in Koldo Supreme Court trial as prosecutors uphold penalties

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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.

Spain's Supreme Court has begun the trial of former minister José Luis Ábalos and his ex-advisor Koldo García over alleged corruption in mask contracts during the pandemic. Key witnesses, including Ábalos's son, García's brother, and Ábalos's ex-partner, testified denying involvement in money handling or irregular appointments. Defenses pointed to businessman Víctor de Aldama as the main culprit.

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Spain's Supreme Court will host the first Koldo case trial over the masks plot starting Tuesday. Former Transport Minister José Luis Ábalos and his ex-advisor Koldo García, held in Soto del Real prison, face up to 30 years in jail. Businessman Víctor de Aldama faces a reduced sentence for cooperating with prosecutors.

On the fifth day of the Koldo case trial at Spain's Supreme Court, witnesses described the role of José Luis Ábalos's advisor, Koldo García, in doubling a masks order to Soluciones de Gestión during the pandemic. Ex-Transportes subsecretary Jesús Manuel Gómez attributed to Koldo the phrase 'eight million or nothing'. Other witnesses upheld the contracts' legality.

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Prosecutor Begoña García Boró requested acquittal on Monday for David Sánchez and ten other defendants in the trial over a 2017 job creation at the Diputación de Badajoz. Defenses sharply criticized Lieutenant Colonel Antonio Balas for his testimony. Popular accusations defended the UCO conclusions.

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.

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Judge José Luis Calama of the Audiencia Nacional has charged former president José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero as the alleged leader of an influence-peddling network tied to the 53-million-euro rescue of airline Plus Ultra. Zapatero is summoned to testify on June 2. The former leader denies any improper involvement.

 

 

 

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