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Corruption: Spain’s battle against the bad eggs

 

Former judge Luis Pascual Estevill was jailed for nine years and fined EUR 1.8 million after being convicted of leading the largest corruption racket discovered in the Spanish judicial system in 25 years.

Estevill, a former judge in Barcelona and one-time member of the General Council of the Judiciary, was found to have accepted bribes and helped run an extortion racket between 1990 and 1994.

A former high-profile Catalan lawyer, Joan Piqué Vidal, was also sentenced to seven years imprisonment and fined EUR 900,000 in relation to the case.

According to the court ruling, Estevill and Piqué Vidal abused their positions to demand backhanders from businesses involved in lawsuits.

The extortion allowed them to accumulate hundreds of thousands of euros in bribes over the four-year period.

As part of the sentence, they have been ordered to compensate victims with amounts ranging between EUR 3,000 and EUR 90,000.

Several other people found guilty of participating in the scam, including Estevill’s son, were fined and sentenced to up to one year in prison.

This is just the lastest in a long line of high-profile scandals in Spain.

Determined to put a stop to the rot, the Socialist government of Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has announced plans to introduce code of conduct in public life.

It will mean the crusty titles to which Spanish officialdom has been attached since the time of Don Quijote are to disappear under the rules of ‘good governance’.

No longer will ministers and senior officials be addressed as ‘exelencia’, but as plain senor and senora.

The ethics code, which could be in place by the middle of next year, will aim at ‘transparency and austerity’ in public life.

Politicians and officials will be expected to hold only one job, rather than accumulating many positions, as some do at present.

And they will not be supposed to hold any outside position that limits their availability or dedication to their political work.

Politicians and senior officials will be expected to reveal their wealth and place their investments in a blind trust. They should accept only nominal gifts where courtesy demands it, and refrain from ostentatious or inappropriate behaviour.

The new code of conduct comes after Spaniards told an international poll on corruption that they believed their politicians were the most corrupt section in society.

To many an outsider, this might seem a predictable reaction; politicians are never the most popular characters in any society.

But a look at recent form would explain much – Spain has been dogged by scandals. Indeed, a series of high-level political scandals were what did for the last Socialist government of Felipe Gonzalez, who lost power in 1996.

Here we detail the major scandals of recent years.

The ex-secretary of state for security

The crime:

 

 

Rafael Vera was finally jailed in October for seven years for paying out bonuses to personal contacts and stealing up to EUR 5 million in one of the biggest scandals of the Nineties. He still has the support of Gonzalez, who asked for him to be pardoned. It was originally claimed Vera was involved in the ‘dirty war’ against ETA in which a number of leading politicians became embroiled.

The punishment:

Ordered to pay back EUR 3,876,525, he has had had three houses and property seized but these do not cover this sum.

The banker

The crime:

 

 

The Gescartera brokerage house collapsed and its main shareholder Antonio Camacho was jailed in 2001 after EUR 108 million of clients’ money went missing. He used the money to pay for gifts and ‘bought’ jobs for staff at the Spanish stock market regulator and pocketed the rest. One junior minister was forced to resign. The affair exposed the ‘o