Zapatero’s wife is facing scrutiny from Spain’s Economic and Fiscal Crime Unit (UDEF) regarding a shared bank account that was reportedly credited with €1.5 million.
The Plus Ultra investigation has widened its focus to include the family circle of former Spanish Prime Minister José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero after Spain’s Economic and Fiscal Crime Unit (UDEF) detected deposits totaling €1.5 million in a bank account shared by Zapatero and his wife, Sonsoles Espinosa.
According to investigators, the joint account was reportedly credited with transfers from various companies tied to the business network now under scrutiny, and authorities suspect that some of those resources may be linked to transactions under review by Spain’s National Court within the ongoing Plus Ultra bailout investigation.
Documents included in the case reportedly indicate that the funds mainly originated from companies such as Análisis Relevante and businesses associated with the Thinking Heads group. Some of the financial movements are said to have taken place between 2020 and 2025, during the same period under investigation by Judge José Luis Calama.
Investigators at the UDEF are now assessing whether the funds deposited into the account might have served to cover real estate acquisitions, mortgage obligations, or household costs. Within this framework, they have not dismissed the prospect that Sonsoles Espinosa could ultimately be viewed as a recipient of illicit proceeds, a legal designation granted to individuals who gain financially from allegedly unlawful resources without taking part directly in the underlying offense.
Authorities are also reviewing a series of property deals the family completed in recent years, reportedly involving the acquisition of a residence in Madrid’s exclusive Puerta de Hierro district, as well as other assets linked to the family circle. Investigators are working to establish whether those purchases may have been funded with the money currently under examination.
The investigation is also assessing the activities of the former prime minister’s daughters, Alba and Laura Rodríguez Espinosa, after authorities traced payments from companies under scrutiny to businesses reportedly connected to them, and court documents show that investigators are analyzing whether any legitimate work was carried out to justify those transactions.
The National Court judge overseeing the case contends that Zapatero may have led an organized network created to sway administrative decisions related to the Plus Ultra bailout and additional business dealings, and the inquiry covers suspected crimes including influence peddling, participation in a criminal organization, and the falsification of documents.
As the judicial investigation moves forward, the former prime minister has denied any wrongdoing and insists that all of his public and private activities complied fully with the law. Zapatero is scheduled to testify before the National Court on June 2.
Reference: From The Objective https://theobjective.com/espana/2026-05-22/mujer-zapatero-udef-cuenta-comun-millones/