Spanish
PM’s former right-hand man jailed for 24 years for corruption
José Luis
Ábalos found to have taken bribes on Covid-era public contracts in damaging
blow to Pedro Sánchez
Stephen
Burgen in Barcelona
Mon 22
Jun 2026 17.51 CEST
Spain’s
supreme court has jailed the former transport minister José Luis Ábalos for 24
years for taking bribes on public contracts for sanitary equipment such as face
masks during the Covid pandemic.
Ábalos’s
aide, Koldo García, was jailed for 19 years in a trial that is one of several
scandals to have enveloped the government of Pedro Sánchez over recent months.
The case
is seen as particularly damaging for Sánchez because Ábalos was his trusted
right-hand man for many years.
Ábalos
and Koldo heard the sentencing via video-conference in the Madrid prison where
they have both been held in preventive custody since November.
Presided
over by seven judges, the court heard evidence from public officials, civil
servants, expert witnesses and police, and found Ábalos and García guilty of
being part of a criminal organisation, bribery, misuse of public funds, money
laundering and influence peddling.
The court
concluded that “the seriousness of the charges derives from the fact that they
erode the fundamentals of a democratic state and distort the purpose of public
power into an instrument at the service of individual interests”.
The
sentencing comes two days after a separate court ruled that Sánchez’s wife,
Begoña Gómez, who faces corruption and influence-peddling charges, is a flight
risk and must hand over her passport.
Gómez is
awaiting trial over accusations she used her influence as the prime minister’s
wife to secure sponsors for a university master’s degree course she ran, and
that she used state funds to pay her assistant for help with personal matters.
The case was triggered by a complaint from the rightwing pressure group Manos
Limpias, which translates as Clean Hands.
Gómez
lives in the Moncloa palace, which is the seat of government and probably one
of the most secure buildings in Spain, but the judge Juan Carlos Peinado said
members of her security detail might help her to escape.
This in
turn has led Spain’s judicial watchdog, the General Council for Judicial Power,
to take disciplinary action against Peinado for the “serious offence” of
impugning the integrity of public servants, in this case, Gómez’s personal
protection agents.
Spain’s
national police also released a rare statement calling the judge’s reasoning
unjustified and stressing the force’s political neutrality.
The
government has denounced Peinado for what it described as his obsession with
Gómez who, even if found guilty, would apparently have derived no personal
benefit from the alleged influence peddling.
Sánchez
has not been named in any of the cases, but his brother, David, is on trial
over allegations that he was handed a bespoke job by the Socialist-led council
of the south-western town of Badajoz in July 2017, when his brother was the
national leader of the party but not yet prime minister.
Gómez and
David Sánchez have denied any wrongdoing, and the prime minister has said his
family have been the victims of a harassment and bullying operation.
The case
against David Sánchez was also brought by Manos Limpias, leading many to
believe there has been a concerted effort by rightwing forces to damage the
Sánchez government.
So-called
“lawfare” has become increasingly common in Spain, where the courts are obliged
to consider cases brought by private organisations or individuals, however
frivolous the charge might initially appear.
During
her eight years in office, Barcelona’s leftwing mayor Ada Colau faced 22 legal
challenges to her policies, every one of which was eventually dismissed.
Ábalos is
the fifth government minister to be jailed since Spain’s transition to
democracy in 1978.
Víctor de
Aldama, a businessman linked to the scandal was also jailed for four and half
years on Monday, but his sentence was suspended because he had cooperated with
the court. Nor will he have to hand back the €3.7m (£3.2m) he received in
commissions over the procurement of masks.

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