Not just Qatargate: Eva Kaili also faces probe
into EU kickbacks scheme
POLITICO has obtained documents showing Kaili is
accused of taking a cut from her assistants’ salaries and their faked
reimbursement requests.
In total, investigators say Kaili owes the European
Parliament “around €100,000,” according to a person familiar with the case.
APRIL 25,
2023 4:05 AM CET
. https://www.politico.eu/article/eva-kaili-qatargate-corruption-european-parliament-kickbacks-scheme/
Qatargate
aside, Eva Kaili is facing a world of pain for a different reason altogether.
Documents
seen by POLITICO reveal fresh details about a separate criminal investigation that
the Greek EU lawmaker is facing regarding allegedly fraudulent payments
involving four former assistants in the European Parliament from 2014 to 2020.
The probe
is looking at Kaili for three potential fraudulent activities: whether she
misled Parliament about her assistants’ location and work activities; took a
cut of their reimbursements for “fake” work trips she orchestrated; and also
took kickbacks from part of their salaries, according to a letter from the
European Public Prosecutor’s Office (EPPO) to Parliament President Roberta
Metsola, seen by POLITICO.
Another
Greek EU lawmaker, Maria Spyraki, has also been part of the same probe.
Investigators accuse her of misleading the institution about her assistants’
activities and of telling them to file expenses for fake work trips. However,
the documents do not allege that Spyraki took kickbacks from salaries or false
reimbursements.
In total,
investigators say Kaili owes the European Parliament “around €100,000,”
according to a person familiar with the case.
The details
offer the first real insight into the inquiry since it became public in
December, only days after Kaili was put in jail under suspicion that she was
involved in an even bigger scandal, Qatargate — the alleged bribery ring that
prosecutors say involved countries such as Qatar and Morocco paying off
European Parliament members.
And with
all Qatargate suspects now out of detention, and no new arrests since February,
attention is now shifting to the fraud case. MEPs in the Parliament’s legal
affairs committee will discuss Kaili’s case behind closed doors for the first
time on Tuesday.
Kaili, who
was moved to house arrest earlier this month, is currently fighting the
prosecutor’s request to strip her immunity — a privilege afforded to EU
lawmakers. But the EU prosecutor’s office, which investigates criminal fraud
linked to EU funds, has argued its probe is on solid ground.
“The
current investigation pertains to strong suspicions of repeated fraud and/or
other serious irregularities,” European Chief Prosecutor Laura Kövesi said in
the letter seen by POLITICO, which was sent to Parliament in December and
requested both Kaili and Spyraki be stripped of their immunity.
EPPO
declined to comment on the case for this article. Kaili, through an attorney,
said she has promised to pay back any money owed and to comply with any
recommendations. Spyraki told POLITICO that her case has nothing to do with
Kaili, and she confirmed she has never been accused of taking kickbacks.
“I have no
dispute on the budget based on my responsibility as supervisor,” she said. “I
have already paid the relevant amount and I have already asked the services to
reassess my case financially.”
Kickbacks
The
European prosecutor went public about the fraud inquiry on December 15, just
days after Kaili had been arrested in Brussels in connection with Qatargate.
The notice
named both Kaili, who belonged to the center-left Socialists and Democrats
grouping, and Spyraki, a former journalist and former spokesperson for the
center-right Greek party New Democracy, which is affiliated with the large
European People’s Party group in Brussels.
The
announcement came the same day Kövesi sent her immunity-lifting request to
Metsola. The documents also named four former staffers of Kaili and two former
assistants to Spyraki as potentially participating in the different schemes.
But
officials publicly offered few specifics about the inquiry, only noting that it
was unrelated to the Qatargate affair, which had also ensnared Kaili’s life
partner Francesco Giorgi, as well as several other current and former EU
lawmakers.
Now the
details are starting to emerge.
According to
the letter seen by POLITICO, the EPPO probe is examining both Kaili and Spyraki
over irregularities regarding their assistants’ “physical presence at the place
of employment” and “related European Parliament decisions on working time.”
According
to the same letter, another line of inquiry is “fake missions, submission of
false supporting documents and undue reimbursement claims for missions expenses
by the APAs on the request of Ms Kaili and Ms Spyraki.” APA is an acronym for
accredited parliamentary assistant.
Eva Kaili
poses for the “MEPs for #millennialvoices”campaign in 2016 | European
Parliament
Kaili
specifically is also under investigation for receiving “payback” from her
assistants’ salaries and the falsified expenses.
The public
prosecutor’s probe follows an investigation by the EU’s anti-fraud office,
known as OLAF, which was completed on November 23 of last year. OLAF then
transferred its case to EPPO, it said in a December statement.
OLAF said
it would leave any follow-up to the public prosecutor’s office, declining to
comment beyond its statement four months ago.
Immunity
fight
The EPPO
case is also becoming entangled in the fight over whether to lift Kaili’s
immunity.
Immunity is
a special privilege MEPs enjoy that is intended to protect them from being
arbitrarily prosecuted for what they say or do as EU lawmakers. It can be
waived following a recommendation by the legal affairs committee and a vote by
all MEPs.
Parliament
is now starting that process for Kaili, having already kicked it off for
Spyraki. MEPs will discuss Kaili’s immunity at the legal affairs committee
gathering on Tuesday.
Investigators say Kaili owes the European Parliament
“around €100,000” | European Parliament
Spyros
Pappas, Kaili’s lawyer, argued that typically, such fraud cases are closed
after OLAF finishes its probe — as it did with Kaili — with the lawmaker paying
back whatever the office says is owed. He also questioned how officials could
justify lifting immunity for actions that stretch back to 2014.
“One cannot
but question both the legality and the opportunity of the initiative taken by
EPPO,” he said. “The answer can only be given by the General Court of Justice
of the EU.”

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