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Archive June 8, 2025

Mass demonstration calls for Spain’s leader to resign over corruption

Tens of thousands of people have taken part in an opposition-organised demonstration in Spain’s capital, Madrid, accusing the government of Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez of corruption and urging him to call early elections.

Protesters, many waving red and yellow Spanish flags, massed on Sunday in the Plaza de Espana, a large square in the centre of Madrid, and chanted, “Pedro Sanchez, resign!”

The conservative Popular Party (PP) called the rally after leaked audio recordings allegedly documented a member of the Socialist Workers’ Party, Leire Diez, waging a smear campaign against a police unit that investigated corruption allegations against Sanchez’s wife, brother, and his former transport minister and right-hand man Jose Luis Abalos.

Diez has denied the allegations, telling reporters on Wednesday that she was conducting research for a book and was not working on behalf of the party or Sanchez. She also resigned from Sanchez’s party.

PP leader Alberto Nunez Feijoo has accused the government of “mafia practices” over the affair and said Sanchez is “at the centre” of multiple corruption scandals.

Sanchez and his government have been embroiled in numerous scandals with perhaps the most significant being the “Koldo Case”, or “Masks Case”, which concerns corruption allegations in the awarding of public contracts for medical supplies, particularly masks, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The case involves Abalos and his former adviser Koldo Garcia Izaguirre, the latter of whom is accused of using his influence to secure contracts for certain companies and receiving substantial commissions in return.

Sanchez considered stepping down in April 2024 after a Madrid court opened an investigation into his wife, Begona Gomez, on suspicion of influence peddling and business corruption.

The right-wing organisation Manos Limpias (Clean Hands) initially made the allegations against Gomez, who is accused of using her position to influence the awarding of government contracts and of irregularities in her professional activities.

‘Smear campaign’

Sanchez has dismissed the probes against members of his inner circle and family as part of a “smear campaign” carried out by the right wing to undermine his government.

But Feijoo urged Sanchez to call early elections and told the rally: “This government has stained everything – politics, state institutions, the separation of powers.”

The PP estimated that more than 100,000 people attended the rally, held under the slogan “Mafia or Democracy”, while the central government’s representative in Madrid put the turnout at 45,000 to 50,000.

“The expiry date on this government passed a long time ago. It’s getting tiring,” protester Blanca Requejo, a 46-year-old store manager who wore a Spanish flag draped over her back, told the AFP news agency.

Sanchez came to power in June 2018 after ousting his PP predecessor Mariano Rajoy in a no-confidence vote over a corruption scandal involving the conservative party.

Fact-checking claims Trump’s pardons wiped out $1bn in debt owed to US

Liz Oyer, a lawyer with the United States Department of Justice handling pardons for a long time, was fired by the Trump administration in March. Since then, Oyer has publicly criticised the administration, including its approach to pardons.

In an April 30 video on TikTok, Oyer took issue with many of Trump’s pardons, not only because they short-circuited the justice system but also because of their financial impact.

“President Trump has granted pardons that have wiped out over $1bn in debts owed by wealthy Americans who have committed fraud and broken the law,” claims Oyer, who said she was fired because she opposed a pardon to restore gun rights to actor Mel Gibson, a Trump supporter who was convicted on misdemeanour domestic violence charges in 2011.

US Senator Cory Booker, a Democrat from New Jersey, shared her post on May 31 on Instagram, saying Trump is “selling pardons to criminals who dump money on him and ingratiate themselves to his ego. They not only get out of jail, but they get out of the money they owe to make restitution for their crimes. This is wrong.”

Oyer’s Substack includes a running list of Trump’s pardons, along with a dollar figure for each that she says the pardon erased. The dollar figures on her list include fines – a financial penalty for being convicted of a crime – and restitution, which is designed to compensate victims for their losses.

As of June 5, Oyer’s pardon tracker listed 24 people with federal convictions whom Trump pardoned, along with the dollar amounts to be forgiven.

People and companies pardoned by Trump could save up to $1.3bn

On the surface, the maths holds: collectively, the 24 pardoned people and companies Oyer listed were on the hook for $1.34bn.

“A full pardon would wipe out any payments that were required as part of the criminal sentence”, as long as they have not already been paid, said Brian Kalt, a Michigan State University law professor.

But legal experts offered some caveats about this calculation. Some of the dollar amounts on Oyer’s list were not finalised, which adds some speculation to her total.

Oyer did not respond to inquiries for this article.

The biggest debts erased by pardons so far

After four and a half months in office, Trump has surpassed all but three post-World War II presidents for the number of clemency actions, which include pardons and commutations. His total is dominated by the roughly 1,500 pardons he granted to people who faced legal consequences from their participation in the events of January 6, 2021, when pro-Trump rioters stormed the US Capitol.

Trump’s second-term clemency acts exceed all but three modern presidents

The vast majority of clemency actions by Trump’s predecessor, President Joe Biden, were commutations, meaning they did not affect fines or restitution. (Biden commuted sentences for 37 people on death row and about 2,500 others convicted of nonviolent drug crimes.)

Biden pardoned 80 people over four years; Trump has pardoned 58 people in four and a half months, excluding the January 6, 2021-related pardons.

The four pardon recipients on Oyer’s list with the highest debt would collectively exceed $1bn by themselves. They are:

  • Trevor Milton, an electric-truck company owner, who had been convicted of securities fraud and wire fraud in 2023 and sentenced to four years in prison. He was ordered to pay $676m in restitution.
  • Ross William Ulbricht, the founder of Silk Road, an online marketplace that sold illegal drugs such as cocaine and heroin. Ulbricht had been convicted of aiding and abetting the distribution of drugs over the internet, continuing criminal enterprise, computer hacking conspiracy, and money laundering conspiracy. He had been sentenced to life in prison. (Ulbricht’s pardon fulfilled a Trump campaign promise.) Ulbricht was ordered to pay almost $184m.
  • HDR Global Trading Limited, operator of a cryptocurrency exchange that had been ordered to pay a $100m fine for violating the Bank Secrecy Act’s anti-money laundering provisions.
  • Lawrence Duran, owner of American Therapeutic Corp, a Miami-area mental health company, convicted of multiple counts related to healthcare fraud; Duran was sentenced to 50 years in prison and $87.5m in restitution.

However, it is unclear whether these four would add up to $1bn plus in forgone payments to the federal government, because not every amount listed had been formally approved by a judge.

“Almost always, a pardon has come after sentencing, so we know the amount of the fine or restitution with certainty,” said Mark Osler, a University of St Thomas law professor. But at least in Milton’s case, the pardon came before the restitution portion of his sentencing was completed.

Milton is the most important pardon recipient for judging the accuracy of Oyer’s statement, because it is the largest, accounting for about two-thirds of the $1bn figure.

He was sentenced in December 2023, but legal skirmishing over his restitution package was delayed. In March 2025, federal prosecutors requested that the judge approve about $676m in restitution – $660.8m to shareholders in his company and $15m to one victim. That request was pending at the time of Milton’s pardon.

It is impossible to know whether the judge would have ultimately accepted that amount.

Defendants can contest the prosecution’s restitution request, and they often do, said Frank O Bowman III, a University of Missouri emeritus law professor.

However, “a judge will usually accept” what the government suggests, Osler said.

For the second-, third- and fourth-ranking dollar amounts on Oyer’s list, each was finalised in court. For these, though, it is unclear whether the pardon recipients had already begun to pay any of their restitution. If they had, that could reduce the dollar amounts on Oyer’s list. (Our reporting did not turn up a central, publicly accessible repository showing who had paid what by the time of their pardon.)

Restitution owed by January 6, 2021, pardon recipients, which is not included in Oyer’s figure, could also push the total higher. Democrats on the House Oversight Committee said in a March 2025 letter that people receiving pardons related to January 6, 2021, owed nearly $3m in restitution before being pardoned.

Other high-profile names on Oyer’s list with smaller dollar amounts include: Devon Archer, Hunter Biden’s former business partner, who was interviewed by congressional Republicans during an investigation of Joe Biden, Hunter’s father; Carlos Watson, the founder of Ozy Media Inc, who was convicted on several fraud counts; reality TV stars Todd Chrisley and Julie Chrisley, who were also convicted on fraud counts; and former politicians Michael Grimm, John Rowland, Michelle Fiore and Alexander Sittenfeld.

Oyer told The Washington Post that when deciding clemency, past presidents have hewed closer to the recommendations of her former Justice Department office, which has guidelines stating that potential pardon recipients should have already completed their sentence, including paying any restitution.

“It’s unprecedented for a president to grant pardons that have the effect of wiping out so much debt owed by people who have committed frauds,” Oyer told the Post. “They do not meet Justice Department standards for recommending a pardon.”

Legal experts told PolitiFact that courts have not ruled on what happens to fines or restitution payments after a pardon if they had not already been paid. A 1995 Justice Department memo said that although payments already made and received would not be subject to being clawed back, the obligations not yet paid at the time of the pardon would be forgiven.

“This question, to our knowledge, has not been decided by any court, but we conclude, based upon existing precedent, that a pardon does reach such restitution where the victim has not yet received the restitution award, provided the pardon does not contain an express limitation to the contrary,” the memo said.

Margaret Love, who held Oyer’s former post at the Justice Department from 1990 to 1997, said, “If money is paid to the government, you can’t get the money back except through a congressional appropriation.”

For restitution intended to compensate a person — such as the victim of a fraudulent scheme — it appears that the victims are out of luck once a pardon is issued if they have not received that money already, legal experts said. It is unclear whether the victims would be obliged to repay the restitution they had already received back to the pardoned convict who defrauded them.

“I don’t know if it has ever come up,” Osler said.

Our ruling

Oyer said, “President Trump has granted pardons that have wiped out over $1bn in debts owed by wealthy Americans who have committed fraud and broken the law.”

In 24 Trump pardons Oyer cited, the four biggest dollar amounts top $1bn. However, the single biggest – about $676m – relates to an amount sought by prosecutors that had not been formally approved by a judge before the pardon was issued, making the dollar figure speculative. It accounts for about two-thirds of the $1bn figure.

Singles with Scheffler, working with pop stars & now a tour winner

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KLM Open final round leaderboard

-11 C Syme (Sco), -9 J Lagergren (Swe), -4 J Schaper (RSA), -3 E Ferguson (Sco), J Senior (Eng), R Ramsay (Sco)

Selected others: -2 A Sullivan (Eng), D Bradbury (Eng), -1 G Forrest (Sco), N Kimsey (Eng)

Connor Syme has brushed shoulders with Scottie Scheffler and One Direction’s Niall Horan during his golfing career, but those glamorous encounters will pale in comparison to the week he has just had in Amsterdam.

The Scot battled difficult conditions at the KLM Open to shoot a final-round 71 and win his first DP World Tour title at the 182nd attempt.

Syme, who twice finished second in 2022, led the field by two shots after 54 holes and no player was able to chase him down as the rain fell and wind gusted.

Sweden’s Joakim Lagergren eagled the last to finish on nine under par, but playing partner Syme held his nerve to make a par of his own and win by two shots.

“I’ve played a lot of tournaments and you just start to think, is it ever going to happen?” the 29-year-old told BBC Sport Scotland.

“I’ve been in a bad run and it’s amazing where your brain will take you sometimes, but I think I really just focused this week.

” I don’t know what it was, but I had a really clear picture about what I was trying to do and I was able to do it. “

The Kirkcaldy-born golfer took home the first prize of $467, 500 (£345, 000) and was congratulated on the 18th green by compatriot Ewan Ferguson, who finished three under and made a hole-in-one at the seventh earlier in the day.

How has Syme’s career gone so far?

Syme’s only previous professional victory was in 2019 on the Challenge Tour, when he beat Italy’s Francesco Laporta in the Turkish Airline Challenge.

But it was as an amateur where he first showed signs of his immense talent.

In 2016, he won the Australian Amateur Championship before competing alongside Bob MacIntyre in the Walker Cup the following year, where he lost by one hole in the singles to current world number one Scheffler.

Team GB &amp, Ireland lost heavily to a USA team that year which also included Collin Morikawa, Cameron Champ and Will Zalatoris.

Syme – a talented footballer in his youth – turned pro after the Walker Cup and signed with the management company Modest! Golf who are co-owned by pop star Horan – a former member of One Direction.

This season so far has been a mixed bag for Syme, with a ninth-placed finish in the Joburg Open his best of the campaign until this week.

The victory in Amsterdam comes with a two-year exemption on the DP World Tour.

It also moved him up 71 places in the DP World Tour rankings to 18th position, and puts him into contention for one of the 10 places up for grabs on the PGA Tour for next season.

” Since they had those cards out, definitely my goal is to try and find a way to get one of them and end up in America, “Syme said.

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Marc Marquez extends MotoGP lead with dominant Aragon win

Images courtesy of Getty

Marc Marquez won the Aragon Grand Prix in Spain to claim his fourth victory of the year, capping off a strong weekend.

The 32-year-old Ducati rider claimed the pole position position for Sunday’s race on Saturday after breaking the lap record. This is his 99th pole of career.

Marquez led the race well and made a strong start to the day.

In the first few seconds, Alex’s brother Alex put pressure on him, but Marquez extended the lead to 1.5, and Alex was unable to respond.

The Spanishman increases his lead over his brother Alex, who placed second, to 32 points, in the MotoGP standings.

Marquez remarked, “It was an amazing weekend.” The others were getting closer and closer each session, but I was persistent, as I had anticipated.

The Marquez brothers jumped off their bikes in front of a crowd of thousands of people who had been cheering them on after the race.

Francesco Bagnaia, who finished 12th in the sprint race, added another rider who made a smile on his face.

He placed fourth in the Grand Prix starting grid, but he placed third overall.

With only 14 races left in the 2025 campaign, the Aragon race was the eighth of the season.

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How Palace are fighting to keep European dream alive

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Crystal Palace are anxiously waiting to hear whether their European dream is over before it even begins.

Winning the FA Cup – the Eagles’ first major trophy triumph – resulted in the south London club qualifying for the Europa League, the club’s only qualification into continental football in their 164-year history.

However, whether Palace can start planning for European football is in the hands of governing body Uefa, who must decide whether the Eagles have breached its rules on teams under one multi-club ownership structure competing in the same European competition.

Uefa’s final ruling will centre on American businessman John Textor, owner of Eagle Football – which holds a 43% stake in Palace.

Eagle Football also owns a 77% stake in French side Lyon, who – like Palace – have qualified for next season’s Europa League.

Palace deny operating multi-club model

Uefa’s regulations are in place to prevent collusion between clubs. At the heart of Palace’s argument is that their historic FA Cup win and consequential European qualification was an achievement accomplished entirely on their own merit.

Palace are insisting they are an entity that operates entirely independently, and not within the structures of a multi-club model.

Sources with knowledge of the situation have told BBC Sport that Textor’s personal share in the Selhurst Park side does not meet the 30% threshold – which is key in Uefa determining decisive influence – and that he has just 25% of the voting rights.

Uefa’s rules state that “no individual or legal entity” can hold a majority of shareholder voting rights at two clubs in the same European tournament.

Additionally, it is understood Palace have made clear they had no assistance in winning the FA Cup, in that they have not collaborated with Lyon since Textor’s original investment into the club in August 2021 and will have no connection with the French side during next year’s Europa League.

The Premier League side are believed to have pointed out that there have been no transfers between the clubs since Jake O’Brien, now at Everton, left Palace for Lyon in August 2023.

Palace also say there has been no employee, backroom staff or coach sharing, no dialogue, no collaborative strategy, no combined partnerships, sponsorships or commercial deals and no collective scouting, analysis or software collaborations.

It is accepted, and been widely reported, that chairman Steve Parish and his leadership team make all final decisions in relation to the management and operations at Palace.

That working structure has existed for a decade and is supported by fellow shareholders Josh Harris and David Blitzer.

Indeed, Textor, who only has one vote, has publicly spoken about his lack of influence at Selhurst Park.

“As proud as we are to have been a part of the resurgence of Crystal Palace, it remains true that Crystal Palace is an independent club, run by a man with a steady hand, who has achieved a level of sustainability that is incredibly uncommon in today’s Premier League,” said Textor in May 2024.

“An integrated sporting model, such as ours at Eagle, is simply not a perfect fit for Crystal Palace.”

It has been pointed out to Uefa that Textor is an individual and minority shareholder and, when he first invested into Crystal Palace in 2021, he owned no other clubs and his investment into other teams followed later.

Textor could resign as Palace director

John TextorGetty Images

Under Article 5 of Uefa’s rulebook, which relates to the integrity of the “competition/multi-club ownership”, a club is required from 1 March 2025 to have complied with the requirements necessary to prove they are not “simultaneously involved in any capacity whatsoever in the management, administration, and/or sporting performance of more than one club participating in a Uefa club competition”.

In the past clubs have sought to divest the stakes of key shareholders with a view to complying with Uefa’s regulations.

For example, the City Group, Ineos, Red Bull group and most recently Nottingham Forest owner Evangelos Marinakis have adapted their shareholdings in clubs accordingly to ensure their teams can compete in the same European competitions.

Last year Ineos, which owns Manchester United, put its shares in French club Nice into a blind trust to ensure both clubs could compete in the Europa League last season.

Ineos made a similar move earlier this season by placing its ownership of Swiss club Lausanne-Sport into a blind trust, before a potential conflict in the 2025-26 campaign.

Uefa’s rules regarding the 1 March deadline are clear – and clubs have sought to comply with the regulations and cut-offs. A template for Palace to follow is in place.

However, Palace are understood to have made clear that Textor’s position means he cannot be enforced by the club to place his shares into a blind trust, owing to a lack of legal authority, unlike previous precedents where a single entity owns multiple clubs.

Parish, as has been well documented, effectively holds the deciding vote at Palace with the backing of Harris and Blitzer, so existing shareholder agreements would need to be altered to enforce a blind trust scenario – which is not within the club’s power and infringes on Textor’s property rights.

There is also a sense that the chain of events that have left Palace’s position in European football in jeopardy were unforeseen and is a factor towards why they failed to meet the deadline for ownership restructuring.

Palace faced Millwall in the FA Cup fifth round on 1 March. Since then they beat Champions League clubs Aston Villa and Manchester City en route to winning the trophy.

French side Strasbourg conceded a 90th-minute goal on the final day of the season to hand Lyon the final Europa Conference League spot, before Paris St-Germain later won the French Cup to elevate Lyon into the Europa League.

If Uefa rules that Lyon and Palace cannot both compete in the Europa League, regulations state that the French side will play in the competition because of their higher league finish.

In that scenario Palace could play in the Europa Conference League, but even then there is the added complication that Danish club Brondby, who have qualified for the Conference League, are owned by Harris and Blitzer.

Having missed the deadline, Palace have expressed to Uefa that they are prepared to take immediate steps to comply with their requirements.

‘Europa League ban is disproportionate’

It is understood Palace are arguing that banning them from the Europa League would result in a disproportionate sanction and unfairly punish the club, players, staff, fans and local community.

Their thoughts are that preventing the club from competing in the Europa League next season would result in an injustice, particularly given their breach is technical and that no competitive harm has transpired.

It is believed Palace also feel that refusing them a place would contradict the promotion of football’s development that ensure that “sporting values always prevail”, as per Article 2 of Uefa’s statutes.

Therefore, sources are indicating that Palace believe a fine or temporary oversight measures – for example the monitoring of transfers – would appropriately punish a breach, without harming stakeholders who have no involvement in the ownership issue.

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Wollaston denies GB’s Ferguson to win Tour of Britain

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Ally Wollaston overturned a three-second deficit to win the Tour of Britain Women and deny British teenager Cat Ferguson victory.

The New Zealander won all three intermediate sprints on the final stage in Glasgow to draw level with 19-year-old Ferguson, before gaining another four bonus seconds by finishing third behind stage winner Lorena Wiebes and Charlotte Kool.

Wollaston, of FDJ-Suez, beat Movistar’s Ferguson by four seconds overall, with UAE Team ADQ’s Dutchwoman Karlijn Swinkels finishing third.

“I’m a little bit overwhelmed – sorry. I’m so happy, first of all. A massive ‘thank you’ to my team-mates, I couldn’t have done it without them. This means the world to me – it’s my first World Tour victory in GC [general classification],” said Wollaston.

“I knew I needed to get every second I could in the bonus sprints, and unfortunately Cat was right in my wheel every time.

“So it came down to the last sprint, and there was a moment of doubt halfway through that last lap where I thought ‘I just cannot do this today’. My team-mates really helped me pull it together and pulled me to the front for the final.”

Ferguson looked like claiming the first of three time bonuses for the intermediate sprints at the end of the fourth lap of the 8.4km city-centre circuit, but Wollaston squeezed past her with just metres remaining.

Wollaston then beat the Briton in the second intermediate sprint to trail the overall leader’s green jersey by one second.

The 24-year-old moved into the lead with victory on the third intermediate sprint to set up a thrilling finale.

European champion Wiebes launched her attack at the 300m mark before powering over the line first, followed by Kool and Wollaston, who took the last bonus seconds to win the overall classification.

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Stage four results

General classification after stage four

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