terça-feira, 23 de junho de 2026

Spain’s Supreme Court has sentenced José Luis Ábalos, the former transport minister and right-hand man to Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, to 24 years in prison for his central role in a pandemic-era corruption scheme.

 



Spanish PM’s former right-hand man jailed for 24 years for corruption

Spain’s Supreme Court has sentenced José Luis Ábalos, the former transport minister and right-hand man to Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, to 24 years in prison for his central role in a pandemic-era corruption scheme. 

The landmark ruling, handed down on June 22, 2026, marks the first final conviction in the sprawling "Koldo case". The scandal has severely fractured the stability of Spain’s minority Socialist (PSOE) coalition government. 

 

Case Breakdown and Convictions

The Supreme Court ruled that the defendants operated a criminal organization designed to exploit high-level political influence for personal gain. The scheme involved pocketing multi-million euro kickbacks by steering emergency public contracts for medical supplies—specifically face masks—to favored business interests during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

  • José Luis Ábalos (Former Transport Minister): Sentenced to 24 years in prison. He was found guilty of membership in a criminal organization, bribery, embezzlement of public funds, and influence peddling. The court established that public funds financed a lavish lifestyle for Ábalos, including real estate acquisitions for personal associates. 
  • Koldo García (Ábalos’s Former Advisor): Sentenced to 19 years and eight months in prison for serving as the primary intermediary in the graft network. 
  • Víctor de Aldama (Businessman): Sentenced to four and a half years. His prison term was suspended by the court due to his extensive cooperation and confession during the judicial investigation. 

 

Broad Political Fallout

The ruling severely undermines Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, who originally ascended to power in 2018 on explicit promises to clean up systemic political corruption in Spain. In its scathing 224-page verdict, the Supreme Court noted that the actions of the defendants caused a "severe erosion of public trust" and actively undermined the nation's democratic framework. 

 

While Sánchez has not been personally named or legally implicated in the graft network, the conviction hits at a time when his inner circle is facing a wave of separate judicial investigations: 

Begoña Gómez (Sánchez’s Wife): Formally ordered to stand trial by jury for corruption and business influence peddling, with her passport confiscated to prevent her from leaving Spain. 


David Sánchez (Sánchez’s Brother): Currently on trial regarding allegations of preferential treatment and nepotism tied to a public-sector job. 


José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero (Former Prime Minister): Under active investigation for alleged money laundering and influence peddling related to a €53 million pandemic bailout of an airline. 

 

Sánchez has repeatedly dismissed the legal actions facing his family members as politically motivated smears. Despite intense calls from opposition leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo for his immediate resignation, Sánchez maintains that he will not call snap elections. He is scheduled to address the Spanish Parliament on Wednesday to face questioning regarding the mounting scandals affecting his administration

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