Sánchez disagrees with the dossier sent to the judge by Moncloa

Published on May 14, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The President of the Government, Pedro Sánchez, has expressed his displeasure at the decision of the State Legal Service to send a dossier to the judge investigating a case linked to his circle. According to sources close to him, the action was taken without his consent, and he fears it may be interpreted as interference in the judiciary, damaging the Executive's image.

Pedro Sánchez, with a serious expression, holds a dossier; in the background, the Moncloa Palace and a female judge.

Data technology in the judicial defense strategy 🤖

The dossier includes a detailed analysis of the investigating judge's activities, prepared using data mining tools and public access databases. The State Legal Service applied correlation algorithms to link dates, rulings, and statements made by the magistrate. The aim was to build a procedural defense line, but the leak of the document has raised doubts about the ethical limits of using technology in litigation against members of the judiciary.

The dossier Sánchez didn't ask for, but which already has a release date 🎭

It seems that in Moncloa they decided that the best way to defend the president was... to investigate the judge. Because, of course, if there's one thing that has always worked in courtrooms, it's sending a secret report that ends up on the front page. Now Sánchez is as happy as an IT specialist whose hard drive gets hacked right before his project presentation. Good thing the State Legal Service didn't ask for his opinion on their morning coffee.