Villamanín commission forms association to legally claim disputed Gordo prize

A week after reaching a community agreement to cover a four-million-euro shortfall from oversold shares in the 2025 Christmas Lottery Gordo, the Fiesta Commission of Villamanín, León, has created a legal association to process the prize money. Not all participations were officialized, prompting steps like a dedicated website for winners and warnings against scams.

The Fiesta Commission of Villamanín, a town of around 900 inhabitants in León province, is advancing efforts to resolve complications from its 2025 Christmas Lottery win. After discovering on December 22 that more shares (400-450) were sold than official tickets received—creating a shortfall addressed by a December 26 community agreement where the commission covered over two million euros and winners ceded about 3%—new hurdles emerged: not all participations were properly officialized, risking four million euros for local festivities.

In a January 3, 2026 statement, the commission announced forming an association as an 'essential step to do things orderly and with guarantees.' This involves securing a tax ID, opening a bank account, and obtaining ongoing legal advice from lawyers and notaries in León and Madrid. Winning tenths have been notarially documented for secure custody, processing, and deposit.

To include all winners, a website will soon launch for registering tickets via photo upload, reviewing the agreement, and opting in. In-person help will assist elderly residents uncomfortable with online processes.

Amid scam risks, the commission urges caution: ignore requests for money or ticket photos until the official site is live, as no one is authorized to charge fees. They expressed heartfelt thanks for nationwide support from other commissions, associations, businesses, and individuals—including encouragement, help offers, and even Niño Lottery shares—plus local town hall backing, emphasizing community strength and calm.

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Photorealistic illustration of El Gordo 2025 lottery winners—a taxi driver and mechanic—celebrating in Marbella and La Bañeza, León.
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Christmas Lottery's El Gordo 2025 falls in León and Marbella

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The first prize of the 2025 Christmas Lottery, number 79.432, has distributed millions in León towns like La Bañeza and in Marbella, thanks to a bar run by a León emigrant. This draw, held on December 22 at Madrid's Teatro Real, distributed 2.772 million euros in total. Winners like a taxi driver and a mechanic on the Costa del Sol celebrate life changes.

In the Leonese village of Villamanín, residents have reached an agreement to cover a four-million-euro shortfall in distributing the Christmas Lottery's top prize, due to selling more shares than available tickets. The fiesta commission will cover over two million euros, while winners will cede a smaller percentage of their winnings. The deal aims to preserve community peace, though it has sparked divisions and tensions.

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The National Lottery draw on Thursday, December 25, 2025, dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the Las Canteras sand nativity in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, awarded a first prize of 30,000 euros per ticket to number 79200. This event, part of Spanish tradition since 1811, provides complementary prizes totaling thousands of euros for winners. Results are now available on the official Loterías y Apuestas del Estado website.

The National Audience judge has granted provisional release to Vicente Fernández, Leire Díez, and Antxon Alonso, investigated for allegedly rigging public contracts in exchange for commissions. The UCO attributes to the trio the use of influence to secure aids and awards worth over 132 million euros between 2021 and 2023. The three are subject to precautionary measures while the case remains under secrecy.

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Romina Enríquez, who admitted gambling away 17 million pesos raised for Escuela de Comercio N°19's graduation party, has presented a psychiatric certificate seeking to avoid imprisonment. Her lawyer insists she is not a fugitive as authorities probe the funds' fate.

The Anti-Corruption and Good Government Secretariat, led by Raquel Buenrostro Sánchez, fined and banned three companies for submitting fake documents in public procurement processes. Ravisa Autos del Oriente, Gen Industrial, and Escore Alimentos are disqualified for three months from federal government contracts. The penalties aim to safeguard the integrity of public purchases in Mexico.

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The Seventh Guarantee Court in Santiago began the formalization of Gonzalo Migueles, Mario Vargas, and Eduardo Lagos for bribery, money laundering, and influence peddling in the Belarus plot. Prosecutor Carmen Gloria Wittwer detailed million-dollar payments to former Supreme Court Minister Ángela Vivanco in exchange for favorable rulings for Belaz Movitec against Codelco. The Public Ministry requested preventive detention for the defendants.

 

 

 

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