
In just six months, the leader of Se Acabó la Fiesta (SALF), Luis Pérez Fernándezbetter known as Alvise, has racked up four cases before the Supreme Court (TS). These are investigations which range from the alleged illegal financing of training to the harassment of two parliamentarians from his own group.
The Supreme Court requested the request to lift immunity in order to be able to investigate the MEP for alleged electoral crime and alleged irregular financing campaign in the European elections where he won three seats.
Precisely, his classmates are the protagonists of another of the cases in which he appears as an accused. Nora Junco and Diego Solier filed a complaint against them, which the judge of the Criminal Chamber of the Supreme Court (TS) Manuel Marchena accepted. begin investigating alleged crimes of harassment and revealing secrets.
Additionally, the Supreme Court is investigating Alvise for the diffusion of a false PCR of the former Minister of Health and current President of the Generalitat of Catalonia, Salvador Illa. The fourth reason the far-right agitator is under investigation is open for alleged harassment on social networks to Valencia’s hate crimes prosecutor, Susana Gisbert.
Junco and Solier denounced a campaign of harassment against them through social networks, initiated by Alvise who even said of them that had been “bought” by an arms lobbyon the basis of whose interests they voted in the European Parliament. Both received death threats after their emails, phone numbers and places they frequently visited were leaked.
Alvise Pérez’s disagreements with the two MEPs on his list began when the Supreme Court began investigating the presentation to the leader of the SALF of a briefcase of 100,000 euros by businessman Álvaro Romillo, known as CriptoSpain. This sum, supposed to have been used to finance the European campaign, is not reflected in any accounts and does not appear in any document.
Romillo was arrested in September 2024 for an alleged pyramid scheme involving hundreds of customers. Once discovered, he made the decision to confess and collaborate with Justice. It was at this point that the businessman explained that had given Alvise these 100,000 euros in cash for “personal expenses”.
In the case of the publication of a false covid-19 PCR test of former minister Salvador Illa, an investigation is being carried out by a alleged crime of falsification of documents and another of insults. Alvise denied having been the author of the falsification of the document distributed in the middle of the regional electoral campaign in Catalonia and defended having limited himself to disseminating a document “circulated massively” on social networks.
Finally, Alvise Pérez has another open case for an alleged offense of insulting a public official and another of coercion against Susana Gisbert, delegate for hate crimes and discrimination of Valencia, whoor reported as the author of messages against him via Telegram. The prosecutor alleged that the SALF leader called on her then 40,000 supporters to express their hatred against her with the aim of disrupting the normal development of her professional and personal life.