Spain just can’t catch a break—a horrid economy with dizzying
unemployment, collapsing banks, a prime minister and ruling party tarred
by corruption.... Now a political espionage scandal blew up, scattering
debris and money laundering allegations far and wide.
Unemployment in Spain was 26% in December, youth unemployment 55%.
GDP last quarter dropped for the fifth month in a row (-0.7%), the
steepest decline since the financial crisis. Consumer spending plunged
10% in December from prior year—following a hike in the value-added tax.
And the budget deficit target of 6.3% (not counting the billions plowed
into bailing out the banks) is skidding out of reach.
This leitmotif is accompanied by an elegantly escalating corruption
scandal that broke in early February. A classic cash-for-contracts
arrangement, where senior politicians received secret payments from
business folks who in return were awarded juicy government contracts.
It was documented in handwritten ledgers,
involved a €22 million slush fund in Switzerland, and was allegedly run
by Luis Bárcenas, the ex-treasurer of the conservative People’s Party
(PP), the party of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy, whose name appears
repeatedly and very inconveniently on the ledgers as recipient [which
put him and Chancellor Merkel on the corruption hot seat in Berlin.... The Confidence Crisis In Spain Sends Out Shock Waves].
Add a political espionage scandal. The case blew up in a peculiar manner. According to sources—everything
in this case is “according to sources”—Método 3, a detective agency,
went out of business not long ago. One of its laid-off employees was an
ex-cop, in charge of the data department. When Método 3 couldn’t pay him
what it owed him, he appropriated the computers, video and audio
recordings, and a bunch of sensitive files. And they’ve shown up at the
technical division of the police in Barcelona.
Now “sources” are talking about what’s in this treasure-trove.
Apparently Método 3 had been commissioned by a long list of clients to
spy on Catalan party leaders, politicians of national parties, judges,
prosecutors, executives, and other prominent figures, sources told La Vanguardia.
One of the recordings was of a lunch meeting at a restaurant in
Barcelona in July 2010 between Alicia Sánchez-Camacho, President of the
PP in Catalonia, and a woman named María Victoria Álvarez.
Álvarez was desperate and scared. She told Sánchez-Camacho that she’d
gone on a road trip to Andorra with her then boyfriend, Pujol
Ferrusola. The trunk was loaded with packets of 500-euro notes, which he
deposited in a bank account there.
She outlined how Pujol Ferrusola—son of powerbroker Jordi Pujol,
leader of the Democratic Convergence of Catalonia (CDC) from 1974 to
2003 and President of Catalonia from 1980 to 2003—was doing his family’s
money laundering. She wanted to report him but feared for her life. So
she asked Sánchez-Camacho for help.
The Pujol-Ferrusola family has been fingered in a police report that seeped
to the surface in 2012. While Jordi Pujol was in power, companies
associated with his sons were awarded lucrative contracts allegedly
through false bidding. These cases had been investigated at the time,
but nothing happened.... Until the recording of a conversation about a
trunk full of euros popped up.
On Thursday, Álvarez finally testified before the High Court about what she’d witnessed.
Also on Thursday, Sánchez-Camacho pressed charges with the police and
filed a complaint in court against Método 3. She’d found out by reading
the papers that her lunch conversation had been recorded—and that the
top official of the Catalan Socialist Party (PSC), José Zaragoza, at the
time party secretary, had allegedly commissioned Método 3 to do the
dirty work.
Interior Minister Jorge Fernández announced an “exhaustive”
investigation. “We have a lot of information,” he said ominously.
Zaragoza and others accused of anything whatsoever have denied
everything.
Sources have told La Vanguardia
that the materials are so massive that the police have formed a special
team, supported by police units from Madrid, to investigate them. The
lunch episode uncovered a web of “unpredictable scope.” The
investigation is still in an early stage, sources said, but the client
list of Método 3 is long and “delicate,” and includes officials of
various political parties and institutions, and the number of people
tangled up in it is vast. “This is about top politicians,” said the
sources.
These revelations are driving the political elite ever deeper into a
malodorous morass just when that same elite is forcefully tightening the
belts of the people. Workers have taken pay cuts, social benefits have
been trimmed, families have lost their homes, the VAT, which hits
everyone, has been jacked up, all to squeeze the maximum from those who
still have any juice left. Yet, Spain’s legal system wasn’t designed to
root out corruption; and Rajoy, among others, may be thinking that this
too shall pass.
Corruption of spectacular proportions is dogging another Eurozone
country waiting for a bailout. Buried deep inside a report on Russia’s
booming underground economy and illicit oil money is a gem: the flows
and amounts of Russian “black money” into and out of Cyprus. They’re
huge. Read.... Cyprus, ‘A Money Laundering Machine For Russian Criminals’.
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