Spain: Former king is target of 3rd corruption investigation
 
 
Spanish Supreme Court
prosecutors have opened a third corruption investigation involving former
monarch Juan Carlos I of Spain, officials said Friday.
Attorney General Dolores
Delgado and top anti-corruption prosecutor Alejandro Luzón told reporters the
probe is still at an “embryonic” stage, private news agency Europa Press
reported.
They said the
investigation was triggered by “financial information” but declined to
elaborate, Europa Press said.
Earlier this week,
prosecutors announced a second investigation into Juan Carlos' finances. The
announcement came after Spanish online daily elDiario.es reported that
anti-corruption prosecutors were probing the alleged use by the former king,
ex-Queen Sofia and other members of the royal family of credit cards linked to
foreign accounts not in their names.
The former king was
already the target of official investigations in Spain and Switzerland for
possible financial wrongdoing. Those investigations prompted him to leave Spain
in August.
Juan Carlos wrote in a
published letter to his son, King Felipe VI, that he was moving abroad due to
the “public repercussions of certain episodes of my past private life.”
The investigations have
embarrassed the royal household and brought low the former monarch who once was
held in high esteem.
Juan Carlos played a key
role in Spain’s transition to democratic rule in the 1970s, when he replaced
Gen. Francisco Franco as the country’s head of state. He reigned for nearly
four decades as Spain modernized and joined the European Union.
But his luxurious life
and corruption scandals tarnishing members of the royal family provided a
striking contrast with the hardship of Spaniards during the global financial
crisis that started more than a decade ago and brought public criticism.
In 2014, Juan Carlos
abdicated and his son ascended to the throne.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


