An inspector from Spain’s tax authority has provided detailed testimony regarding Alberto González Amador, the partner of Isabel Díaz Ayuso, in connection with an alleged tax fraud case. The inspector explained that González Amador supposedly employed false invoices to lower his tax liabilities. The investigation was triggered by a notable increase in revenue in two thousand and twenty, primarily from the sale of medical supplies during the pandemic, juxtaposed against a surprisingly low tax payment that year.
Authorities identified fifteen fraudulent invoices amounting to one point one million euros, leading to a suspected tax evasion of three hundred and fifty thousand nine hundred and ten euros. The inquiry began focusing on the corporate tax of a consulting firm linked to González Amador, Maxwell Cremona, which saw an unexpected spike in income from three hundred and seventy-five thousand euros in two thousand nineteen to two point three million euros the following year.
The inspector noted that such an income increase typically results in higher tax obligations, yet there was a marked decrease in tax payments, raising red flags. The investigation revealed that some invoices, including a questionable one from an agricultural firm for six hundred and twenty thousand euros, lacked convincing evidence of actual services rendered.
Legal proceedings are underway, with prosecutors seeking over three years of imprisonment for González Amador due to two charges of tax fraud and one of forgery. Meanwhile, sources close to Ayuso have dismissed the inspector’s claims as mere opinion, while critics demand accountability from the Madrid President for benefitting from her partner’s alleged fraudulent activities.
This article was written with AI assistance and reviewed by a human editor before publication.