Alvise to appear before the Supreme Court on Monday for alleged harassment of two MEPs

of january 26, 2026 at 09:19h
EuropaPress 6851999 lider acabo fiesta salf eurodiputado luis alvise perez salir declarar
EuropaPress 6851999 lider acabo fiesta salf eurodiputado luis alvise perez salir declarar

The MEP and leader of the 'Se Acabó la Fiesta' (SALF) party, Luis ‘Alvise’ Pérez, has been summoned this Monday to voluntarily testify before the Supreme Court as part of an investigation into alleged crimes of harassment and disclosure of personal data filed by two MEPs.

The summons comes after Alvise's decision to voluntarily appear before the investigating judge, Manuel Marchena. This option was considered before proceedings began to request the European Parliament to lift his parliamentary immunity. The Supreme Court admitted the complaint in June, and a few days ago the two MEPs who have filed a complaint against Alvise, Diego Solier and Nora Junco, formally confirmed their accusations before the high court.

Accusations against Alvise

The investigation for which Alvise will testify this Monday is part of a set of criminal proceedings opened in the Supreme Court. This joins three other cases against the MEP: one analyzes the dissemination of a supposed false PCR test of the then Minister of Health and current president of the Generalitat of Catalonia, Salvador Illa; another investigates possible harassment on social networks towards the prosecutor coordinating hate crimes, Susana Gisbert; and the third focuses on alleged irregular financing of 'Se Acabó la Fiesta' after receiving 100,000 euros from businessman Álvaro Romillo, known as ‘CryptoSpain

The case for alleged harassment originates from the complaint filed by Diego Solier and Nora Junco, who were part of the European candidacy of Se Acabó la Fiesta (SALF) in 2024. After their split from Alvise Pérez's political project, both left the party and joined the European Conservatives and Reformists parliamentary group, led by Brothers of Italy, the party of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.

In their complaint, the MEPs claim they were victims of a harassment campaign by Alvise, who disseminated messages on his podcast and Telegram channel, including personal and location data. Following the leak of their emails, phone numbers, and social media profiles, they began to receive threats and offensive messages, forcing them to close accounts, limit comments, and stop answering calls from unknown numbers.

Alvise's statement before the Supreme Court will allow the magistrate to **gather his version of events** before proceeding with the case, while the investigation into other open cases against him continues

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