A court in Madrid has referred a case for public disorder against the MEP and leader of Se Acabó La Fiesta, Luis ‘Alvise’ Pérez, to the Supreme Court. The investigation, as reported this morning by the newspaper ABC, revolves around his role in the massive demonstrations last year on Ferraz Street, the headquarters of the PSOE, in which he served as leader.
Alvise was not an MEP nor had he announced his intention to run in those elections when in November 2023 he turned his Telegram channel into one of the main centers for disseminating calls to demonstrate on Ferraz Street. During one of those days he even personally went with Daniel Esteve, leader of Desokupa, and led thousands of people to cross Madrid from that area to the vicinity of the Congress of Deputies, where he urged people to sit with their backs to the camera. He comes down before announcing that he was going home for dinner, shortly before the charges on Ferraz began.
In recent weeks, the Supreme Court has received several open cases against Alvise that must be processed due to his capacity. For example, the accusations of slander by a Leonese PSOE deputy for linking him to the Mediator case, or the request from a Seville judge that he be investigated for threats. The Chamber is also pending to take charge of the investigation opened against him for harassing one of Pedro Sánchez’s daughters and another for disseminating a false PCR test of the then minister Salvador Illa.
In parallel, the National Court is investigating whether he illegally financed his candidacy for the European elections with the 100,000 euros that, as elDiario.es revealed, he collected in cash from a cryptocurrency businessman. The MEP established a relationship with Álvaro Romillo, known as ‘CryptoSpain’ and leader of the failed Madeira Invest Club, to the point of participating in a massive event for his company. A few days before starting his campaign for the Europeans, as he himself acknowledged, he went to the headquarters of the Romillo company to collect the cash.
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