The former socialist minister José Luis Ábalos has registered a series of questions in Congress for the Minister of the Interior to clarify if there is any “extrajudicial investigation” about him or his family and if they have detected access to his personal, banking or property data.
Ábalos, who was number two of the PSOE and member of the Government of Pedro Sanchez until July 2020, he already addressed the Executive in July denouncing the “repeated” publication of information that includes “personal details”, such as addresses, trips, accommodations or personal relationships.
Recalling the precedent of the so-called ‘Patriotic Police’ that operated with the first Rajoy Government, as well as similar complaints of illegal espionage made by Podemos deputies, the former minister asked if there was also any investigation into him, but the Government’s response did not allow him satisfied for being “absolutely generic” and for referring to Judicial Police work carried out by the State Security Forces and Corps (FCSE), about which he had not asked.
For this reason, Ábalos now returns to the fray, specifying his questions and asking that “the Government of Spain give concrete, precise and adjusted response“to the topics in which you are interested.
In his new writing, to which Europa Press has had access, the now deputy of the Joint Group asks to know if “there has been any extrajudicial investigation” about a deputy and/or their relatives first degree from January 2020 to the present by the State Security Forces and Bodies.
Queries of your personal data
He also asked whether the Government was aware of queries being carried out in police databases on his personal data and their relatives, or any other deputy, “relating to domiciles and ownership of movable property, travel, hospitality control, police records of exits and entries from the country, Commercial Registry, Property Registry, Cadastre and DGT” in these last four years since his departure from the Government. If so, request an audit report of these accesses to personal data detailing the topics consulted and the people who requested them.
Ábalos also takes the opportunity to ask about the ‘Delorme case’ – better known as the ‘Koldo case’ after his former advisor, Koldo García Izaguirre – to find out why documents were leaked from the Civil Guard seized from his collaborator that affected people who, like him, were not being investigated.
In this sense, he asks to know if the European Public Prosecutor’s Office or the Government itself has made any decision regarding these private documents: “Has the Government carried out actions or actions to guarantee the duty of confidentiality of judicial proceedings?” – he asks -. That measures has the Government adopted to guarantee the fundamental right to the presumption of innocence?”
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