La Moncloa does not give details on the Agenda of Begoña Gómezwife of the President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, at the G20 summit which will take place Monday and Tuesday in Brazil. An appointment for which he asked Judge Juan Carlos Peinado to suspend his statement scheduled for Monday.
At La Moncloa they remain silent regarding the agenda that Begoña Gómez will have this Monday and Tuesday on the occasion of her participation in the G20 Summit to accompany the Head of Executive and which will take place in Brazil.
Executive sources respond that it is the Brazilian authorities who will organize the events of the companions of world leaders these two days and affirm that they do not know, for the moment, which summits they will attend.
A trip for which Gómez had to ask investigating judge number 41 of Madrid, Juan Carlos Peinadoto suspend her summons set for this Monday, November 18 to inform her of a new complaint added to the report against her and for which she is indicted for two new offenses, embezzlement and professional intrusion, which total influence peddling and corruption in the business world, for which she was already under investigation.
Sánchez’s wife claimed that that day he would be “official visit” to Brazilon the occasion of his participation in the G20 Summit. For his part, the magistrate exempted him from appearing in person by an order in which he assured that his participation in the summit “is of a voluntary nature and that acceptance of the invitation could have been excused.”
Despite this, the magistrate considered that the appointment “has a very particular social importance because of her status as the president’s wife” and therefore there are “special privileges” that differentiate her from other citizens. Meanwhile, popular accusations asked the judge to take away his passport so that he could not leave Spain.
Instead, the magistrate agreed that his court’s administration of justice lawyer would then move November 21 at the Palace of La Moncloa to transmit the complaint presented by the Hazte Oír association on October 28. In turn, the court summoned Gómez to testify, assisted by a lawyer, “as an investigator”, on December 18 at 10 a.m.