Spanish
PM’s former aide Santos Cerdán detained without bail in corruption probe
By Gavin
Blackburn with AP, EBU
Published on
30/06/2025 - 20:54 GMT+2
The case
involving Santos Cerdán is the latest and arguably the most serious in a series
of scandals that forced Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez to issue public apologies
and deflect calls from his political opponents for a snap election.
A Supreme
Court investigating judge in Spain ordered a former senior official in the
ruling Socialist Party to be held in pre-trial detention on Monday, as part of
a corruption inquiry that could derail Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez's minority
government.
The case
involving Santos Cerdán is the latest and arguably the most serious in a series
of scandals that forced Sánchez to issue public apologies and deflect calls
from his political opponents for a snap election.
Judge
Leopoldo Puente is investigating allegations against Cerdán, the former
Transport Minister Jose Luis Abalos and his aide Koldo Garcia, that they
received kickbacks for awarding public works contracts.
Cerdán
resigned from office earlier this month but denied the allegations.
Abalos and
Garcia also say they are innocent.
Cerdán’s
resignation came after a statement from Puente citing "strong
evidence" of his possible involvement in the "improper awarding"
of contracts.
In a court
document, Puente said the former official could face charges including
membership of a criminal organisation, influence peddling and bribery.
The judge
denied a bail request for Cerdán, citing concerns he might attempt to destroy
or hide evidence, as his home has not yet been searched.
Puente also
said Cerdán represented a flight risk.
The case is
built on recordings that span a period of years and were seized from Garcia's
home, which Puente said appeared to be authentic despite the defendants arguing
that their voices had been manipulated.
The judge
said Cerdán appeared to be the group leader.
On Monday,
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez defended his Socialist Party's handling of the
corruption allegations, saying that it had acted decisively by asking him to
resign.
"Justice
must determine the responsibilities that Santos Cerdán may have," Sánchez
told reporters during a UN summit in Seville.
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