Ayuso's partner has now distanced himself from the email in which he admitted tax fraud.
González Amador assures the Supreme Court that he did not authorize the media to leak the agreement with the Prosecutor's Office.

MadridIsabel Díaz Ayuso's partner, Alberto González Amador, distanced himself this Friday from the email his lawyer sent to the Madrid Prosecutor's Office acknowledging the commission of two crimes against the Tax Agency. He also acknowledged that the chief of staff of the Madrid president, Miguel Ángel Rodríguez, leaked to The World –although he has not acknowledged it– a response from the prosecutor to the proposed settlement agreement. This was reported by sources present at González Amador's testimony as a witness in the Supreme Court in the case for disclosure of secrets opened against the Attorney General, Álvaro García Ortiz, initiated by a complaint filed by the businessman himself.
González Amador's version contrasts with that of Rodríguez, who, when testifying as a witness, confirmed that Ayuso's partner authorized him to send the press the email from prosecutor Julián Salto, which showed that both parties were negotiating an alternative solution to the legal proceedings for tax fraud. In his appearance before the Supreme Court, the businessman reportedly stated that receiving the label of "confessed fraudster" left him "devastated." Specifically, this Friday, the investigating judge in the case, Ángel Hurtado, summoned González Amador's lawyer at the time of the events, Carlos Neira, to testify as a witness.
What does the statement entail?
What consequences could González Amador's position have? The card that the Attorney General has always wanted to play to disprove the crime of revealing secrets that he is accused of is to demonstrate that Rodríguez had already revealed the secret with the leak in The WorldHowever, Ayuso's chief of staff refused to acknowledge that he was behind the initial report about these emails. Now, the businessman is also doing the top official in the public prosecutor's office, Álvaro García Ortiz, no favors by distancing himself from the leak. If he had authorized it, García Ortiz would have an argument. Furthermore, Ayuso's partner also refuses to admit the confession to the crimes because she has an open case in the Madrid courts specifically related to her alleged tax fraud and wants to maintain her innocence.
When asked about all this, Díaz Ayuso also distanced herself and said that she had nothing to do with them. "I am surprised that the highest representatives of the powers of the State are so interested in the tax audit of an individual, regardless of who their partner is," she noted in a media address.