Aldama accuses, the government stays silent, and justice does not prosecute

Published on April 30, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Víctor de Aldama, a businessman linked to the Koldo case, has been pointing for months to a network of illegal financing targeting the PSOE and the President of the Government. However, the Spanish executive has not filed any lawsuit against him, while accusations pile up in the courts and generate an institutional silence that is, to say the least, striking.

An empty courtroom with a lectern, a muted microphone, and an oppressive silence, while a shadow points to a PSOE sign.

Blockchain technology could shed light on opaque money flows 🔗

If corruption cases have shown anything, it is that money traceability is key. Distributed ledger technology, such as blockchain, allows transactions to be audited in an immutable and transparent manner. Implementing payment verification systems and public contracts based on blockchain would eliminate the opacity that protects certain actors. It is not about faith, but about data that cannot be erased or modified at will.

The prosecutor looks for the sue button but can't find it 🔍

While Aldama drops information bombs every week, the prosecutor's office seems to have lost the instruction manual. Someone should check the justice system's software, because the file charges command has been in airplane mode since the soap opera began. Perhaps the problem is not technical, but rather that the sue button only works when the accused does not have illustrious surnames.