New trouble in the House of Bourbon: Juan Carlos I files a lawsuit against his former lover.
The King Emeritus files a complaint against Corinna Larsen, ten days after filing a complaint against Miguel Ángel Revilla.

BarcelonaJuan Carlos I has decided to sue his former lover Corinna Larsen. He did so just ten days after file a complaint against the former president of Cantabria, Miguel Ángel Revilla. In the past, both were his allies, but now they have become enemies for the emeritus king.
Juan Carlos I has filed the lawsuit against Larsen in Switzerland. It is in this country where the emeritus king, through a Panamanian company, received the 65 million euros he received from Saudi Arabia in 2008. This money, in June 2012, Juan Carlos I irrevocably gave to the businesswoman. Five years ago, Larsen filed a lawsuit in London against Juan Carlos I and the Spanish secret services for harassment. When Larsen filed the lawsuit, he claimed that the harassment had begun when he refused to return the money because he considered it a gift. However, according to those close to the emeritus king, it was not a gift, but rather he was asked to keep it for a time with the promise that he would return it.
As he explained yesterday in Telecinco the director of the magazine ReadingsLuis Pliego, the lawyers are the same ones handling the case against Revilla. According to Pliego, it would be a lawsuit against Revilla's honor and is based on everything Larsen has said in interviews, podcasts, and statements in various media. "They have not been proven, nor do they have evidence that his house in Monaco was burglarized, nor that the CNI (National Criminal Investigation Unit) attempted to attack it. He has no proof of anything he says," Pliego asserts. In the same magazine Pliego directs, Pilar Eyre describes the King Emeritus's latest lawsuits as "suicide": "Juan Carlos I's lawsuit against Miguel Ángel Revilla was the desperate cry of a person who no longer has anything to lose," Eyre writes. "Did he do it on the advice of someone? No, his only advisor has been the absolute solitude in which he lives," she adds.