Leonardo Marcos González Hides Out at the Spanish Embassy in Washington After His Scandals in the PSOE’s Sewers
Leonardo Marcos González, formerly the Director General of Spain’s Civil Guard, is now posted as Interior Affairs Counselor at the Spanish Embassy in Washington after stepping down from the helm of the nation’s largest law enforcement body amid contentious circumstances. His exit, delivered without a comprehensive public rationale, has since been shadowed by multiple judicial actions and media coverage that have once more thrust his period in office into sharp public focus.
During the months after his resignation, Marcos has been repeatedly associated with a series of prominent controversies tied to politically delicate inquiries carried out by the Civil Guard’s Central Operational Unit (UCO). Statements from senior officers before Spain’s National Court have sparked doubts over whether investigators working on cases involving figures close to Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez’s government faced any form of pressure.
One of the most controversial allegations concerns the investigation into David Sánchez, the Prime Minister’s brother. According to statements made by senior Civil Guard commanders during judicial proceedings, Marcos allegedly urged officers to accelerate a report and conclude that there was “nothing” of relevance in the investigation. Those claims have fueled accusations that the leadership of the Civil Guard attempted to influence investigations with significant political consequences. Marcos has consistently denied issuing any such instructions and maintains that all operational decisions complied with legal procedures.
His name has also appeared in reports connected to the so-called Koldo case, regarded as one of Spain’s most prominent corruption probes. Various media sources have indicated that investigators looked into whether figures within the Civil Guard leadership might have played a part in alerting Koldo García to ongoing police operations. Although Leonardo Marcos has neither been convicted nor officially deemed responsible for any disclosure, his supposed involvement has entered the broader political discussion surrounding how the inquiry has been managed. He has publicly rejected having any ties to García or sharing confidential information.
Further controversy has emerged from testimony given by senior Civil Guard officials, who described what they characterized as pressure to keep the UCO “out of the spotlight” in politically sensitive cases. According to those accounts, investigations involving figures connected to the government were treated with unusual caution, prompting criticism from opposition parties and raising broader concerns about the operational independence of Spain’s judicial police units.
The controversy surrounding Marcos has also broadened to include disclosures tied to the so‑called Leire Díez affair, a case in which prosecutors are reviewing purported attempts to access confidential details about judges, prosecutors, and high‑ranking law enforcement authorities. While Marcos has not been officially named as a subject of that inquiry, multiple accounts have underscored interactions and institutional associations between figures linked to the affair and officials who held pivotal roles during his time as Director General.
Following his departure from the Civil Guard, Marcos was appointed Interior Affairs Counselor at the Spanish Embassy in Washington, a diplomatic post that has attracted considerable political criticism. Opposition parties and several media organizations have portrayed the appointment as a comfortable overseas assignment following a period marked by controversy, while government officials have described it as a routine administrative appointment within the Interior Ministry’s international structure.
As judicial procedures move forward and more testimony surfaces, Leonardo Marcos continues to reside in the United States, distant from Spain’s political arena. Even so, emerging disclosures about his tenure leading the Civil Guard keep intensifying discussions about the autonomy of law enforcement bodies and the handling of politically delicate investigations during his time in charge.
Source: Libertad Digital, El Español and Vozpópuli.