This article needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(August 2021) |
| Causa Especial 20907/2017 | |
|---|---|
Supreme Court of Spain in Madrid. | |
| Court | Supreme Court of Spain |
| Full case name | Causa Especial número: 20907/2017 del Tribunal Supremo de España |
| Decided | 14 October 2019 (2019-10-14) |
| Transcripts | |
| Case history | |
| Subsequent actions | Nine defendants sentenced to 9 to 13 years in prison on sedition and misuse of public funds charges; three other defendants fined for disobedience |
| Related action | Six defendants sent their cases to theHigh Court of Justice of Catalonia |
| Court membership | |
| Judges sitting |
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| Case opinions | |
| Concur/dissent | Unanimous ruling |
| Keywords | |
| 2017 Catalan independence referendum | |
Thetrial of Catalonia independence leaders, legally namedCausa Especial 20907/2017 and popularly known as theCausa del procés, was an oraltrial that began on 12 February 2019 in theSupreme Court of Spain. Thecase was tried by seven judges and was chaired by judgeManuel Marchena. JudgePablo Llarena [es;ca] had previously coordinated aninstruction between October 2017 and July 2018, as a result of which 12 people were tried, including the previous vice presidentOriol Junqueras of the regional government and most of the cabinet as well as political activistsJordi Sànchez andJordi Cuixart and the former Speaker of theParliament of CataloniaCarme Forcadell. Some defendants remained in pre-trial detention without bail from the beginning of the instruction process and have thus already served part of theirsentence.
The accused were tried for the events surrounding the organization and celebration of the2017 Catalan independence referendum after it was declared illegal and was suspended by theConstitutional Court of Spain, the passing of laws to override theConstitution of Spain andStatute of Autonomy of Catalonia that were declared illegal and theCatalan declaration of independence on 27 October 2017.
The trial proceedings officially ended on 12 June 2019. A unanimousverdict by the seven judges that tried the case was made public on 14 October 2019. Nine of the 12 accused received prison sentences for the crimes ofsedition; of them, four were also found guilty ofmisuse of public funds. Their sentences ranged from 9 to 13 years. The remaining three accused were found guilty ofdisobedience and were sentenced to pay a fine but received no prison term. The court dismissed the charges ofrebellion.[1] Some of the defendants of the trial have expressed their intention to appeal to theConstitutional Court of Spain and theEuropean Court of Human Rights.[2][3] The verdict delivered by the Supreme Court sparkedmultiple protests across the region.
In June 2021, the nine jailed leaders were pardoned. Prime MinisterPedro Sánchez said that he pardoned them because it was the best decision for Spain and Catalonia, but did not overturn their bans from holding public office.[4]
In 2023, Pedro Sanchez gave the leaders anamnesty following the negotiations in the aftermath of the2023 general election, leading to the2023–2024 Spanish protests against the Amnesty Law.
Catalonia is anautonomous community in Spain, with the capital inBarcelona. As theCounty of Barcelona, it joined theCrown of Aragon in the 12th century. Within the Crown, Barcelona and the other Catalan counties merged into thePrincipality of Catalonia. The whole of the Crown of Aragon united at the end of the 15th century with theCrown of Castile. Today, Catalonia is part of modern Spain.The inhabitants of the region are mostly bilingual inSpanish and inCatalan, and have a distinct linguistic, cultural and historical heritage. Despite belonging to Spain, throughout the history of the region,separatist movements have existed at various moments in the past.
On 9 November 2014, a non-binding2014 Catalan self-determination referendum was held. After the Spanish Government refused to allow a binding referendum, pro-independence parties called for the2015 Catalan regional election to be considered aplebiscite, with the promise to declare independence in 18 months. Pro-independence parties earned a majority in the Parliament but were backed by less than 50% of the voters. In September 2017, theParliament of Catalonia approved theLaw of the referendum onself-determination of Catalonia, as well as theLaw of juridical transition and foundation of the Republic which was to be applied two days after the referendum results were made public and would override theConstitution of Spain andStatute of Autonomy of Catalonia while providing the Parliament with special powers to declare the secession of Catalonia from theKingdom of Spain. Both laws were declared illegal by theConstitutional Court of Spain. The2017 Catalan independence referendum, which was called by theGeneralitat de Catalunya on 1 October 2017, was also suspended by the same court.[5][6] Despite this ruling, the referendum went ahead. On 10 October 2017, the President of the Catalan GovernmentCarles Puigdemont addressed the Parliament of Catalonia, but did not unambiguouslydeclare independence. On 27 October 2017, the Parliament of Catalonia passed a resolution declaring the independence of Catalonia, but no actions were initiated to enforce it. Hours later, the Government of Spain seized control of the Generalitat, invoking Article 155 of the Spanish Constitution. Subsequently, some of the independence leaders were sent to preventive detention without bail, accused of crimes ofrebellion,disobedience, andmisuse of public funds. Carles Puigdemont and four members of his cabinet fled into self-exile.[7]
The prosecution was formed by the State Prosecutor's Office and the State Attorney's Office, with the right-wing political partyVox as public prosecutor. The defendants were accused of the crimes of rebellion, disobedience, and misuse of public funds.
There were a total of 18 people being tried within the context of this case. They are listed below in alphabetical order by their last name, indicating the accusation, the conviction requested and the sentence by the Supreme Court.[15][16][1]
| Name | Portrait | Office | Attorney General prosecution | Solicitor General prosecution | Vox prosecution | Defense lawyer | Verdict | ||||
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| Charge | Requested sentence | Charge | Requested sentence | Charge | Requested sentence | Crime | Sentence | ||||
| Dolors Bassa | Minister of Social Welfare, Employment and Family |
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| Mariano Bergés | Sedition with misuse of public funds | 12 years imprisonment and 12 years ban to hold office | |
| Meritxell Borràs | Minister of Governance, Public Administration and Housing |
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| Disobedience | Fined during 10 months | ||
| Jordi Cuixart | President ofÒmnium Cultural |
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| Marina Roig and Benet Salellas | Sedition | 9 years imprisonment and 9 years ban to hold office | |
| Carme Forcadell | President of the Parliament of Catalonia |
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| Olga Arderiu Ripoll and Raimon Tomás Vinardell | Sedition | 11 years and six months imprisonment and 11 years and six months ban to hold office | |
| Joaquim Forn | Minister of the Interior |
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| Xavier Melero | Sedition | 10 years and six months imprisonment and 10 years and six months ban to hold office | |
| Oriol Junqueras | Vice President of Catalonia |
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| Andreu Van den Eynde | Sedition with misuse of public funds | 13 years imprisonment and 13 years ban to hold office | |
| Carles Mundó | Minister of Justice |
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| Josep Orilla | Disobedience | Fined during 10 months | |
| Raül Romeva | Minister of Foreign Affairs, Institutional Relations, and Transparency |
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| Andreu Van Den Eynde | Sedition with misuse of public funds | 12 years imprisonment and 12 years ban to hold office | |
| Josep Rull | Minister of Planning and Sustainability |
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| Jordi Pina | Sedition | 10 years and six months imprisonment and 10 years and six months ban to hold office | |
| Jordi Sànchez | President of theCatalan National Assembly |
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| Jordi Pina | Sedition | 12 years imprisonment and 12 years ban to hold office | |
| Jordi Turull | Minister of Presidency & Government Spokesperson |
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| Jordi Pina | Sedition with misuse of public funds | 12 years imprisonment and 12 years ban to hold office | |
| Santi Vila | Minister of Culture |
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| Joan Segarra | Disobedience | Fined during 10 months | |
The following six defendants were charged in the instruction of the Supreme Court yet it decided to send their cases to theHigh Court of Justice of Catalonia:[17]
| Name | Portrait | Office | Attorney General prosecution | Solicitor General prosecution | Vox prosecution | Defense lawyer | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charge | Requested sentence | Charge | Requested sentence | Charge | Requested sentence | ||||
| Ramona Barrufet | Fourth Secretary of the Parliament of Catalonia |
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| Judith Gené | |
| Mireia Boya | President of thePopular Unity Candidacy–Constituent Call parliamentary group |
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| Benet Salellas, Isabel Afonso and Carles López | |
| Lluís Corominas | President of theJunts pel Sí parliamentary group |
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| Lluís Guinó [ca;es] | First Vice-President of the Parliament of Catalonia |
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| Joan Josep Nuet | Third Secretary of the Parliament of Catalonia |
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| Enrique Leiva | |
| Anna Simó | First Secretary of the Parliament of Catalonia |
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| Olga Arderiu Ripoll,Raimon Tomás Vinardell | |
In addition, the prosecutor of the Spanish National Court (Audiencia Nacional) is requesting prison time for the former head of theMossos d'Esquadra,Josep Lluís Trapero, and the rest of the Mossos d'Esquadra command in 2017.[18]
The trial began[19][20] on 20 January 2020 and due to theCOVID-19 pandemic in Spain it was suspended on 13 March 2020.[21] The Audiencia Nacional resumed[22] the trial on 8 June 2020 and the case was remitted for decision on 17 June.[23]
On 8 June, the public prosecutor reduced the penalty against of Josep Lluís Trapero, Cèsar Puig and Pere Soler from 11 years in prison for rebellion to 10 years in prison for a crime of sedition although he announced that they would accept the disqualification for 10 years for sedition and a fine of 60.000€.[24][25] Likewise, he maintained the request for 4 years in jail against Teresa Laplana.[26]
| Name | Portrait | Office | Charge | Requested sentence |
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| Josep Lluís Trapero Álvarez | Head of theMossos d'Esquadra |
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| Pere Soler [ca;es] | Director-General of Penitentiary Services and Director of theMossos d'Esquadra |
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| Cèsar Puig | Secretary-General of the Catalan Ministry of Interior |
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| Teresa Laplana | Eixample District Head of theMossos d'Esquadra |
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The court was formed of seven members in the Criminal Chamber of the Supreme Court of Spain, chaired byManuel Marchena:
In September 2018, five of them (Manuel Marchena, Luciano Varela, Juan Ramon Berdugo, Andres Martinez Arrieta and Antonio del Moral) were recused by six of the defendants. The first four were part of the admission room that processed, on 31 October 2017, the complaint filed by the then Attorney General of the State, José Manuel Maza. One of the grounds for the recusation was that, upon admitting the complaint, these four judges could not guarantee their impartiality, a requirement for all members of the court. The Supreme Court dismissed the challenge and supported their impartiality to prosecute the case.[27]
The Supreme Court approved the participation of more than 300 witnesses and refused the declaration of almost 50 others.[note 1]
On 27 February 2019, these witnesses were called to testify (in order of appearance):[29][note 2]
On 28 February 2019, these witnesses testified (in order of appearance):
On 4 March 2019, these witnesses testified (in order of appearance):
On 5 March 2019, these witnesses testified (in order of appearance):
On 14 March 2019 testified (in order of appearance):
The defendants were accused of the following crimes:
| Crime | Article ofPenal Code | Defendants | Cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rebellion | Article 472 and concordant | Oriol Junqueras, Joaquim Forn, Jordi Turull, Raül Romeva, Josep Rull, Dolors Bassa, Carme Forcadell, Jordi Sánchez and Jordi Cuixart | 20907/2017 |
| Misuse of public funds | Article 432 and concordant | Oriol Junqueras, Joaquim Forn, Jordi Turull, Raül Romeva, Josep Rull, Dolors Bassa, Meritxell Borràs, Carles Mundó and Santi Vila | 20907/2017 |
| Disobedience | Article 410 and concordant | Lluís Maria Corominas, Lluís Guinó, Anna Isabel Simó, Ramona Barrufet, Joan Josep Nuet, Mireia Boya, Meritxell Borràs, Carles Mundó and Santi Vila | 20907/2017 |
| Crime | Article ofPenal Code | Defendants | Cause |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sedition | Article 544 and concordant | Oriol Junqueras, Joaquim Forn, Jordi Turull, Raül Romeva, Josep Rull, Dolors Bassa, Carme Forcadell, Jordi Sánchez and Jordi Cuixart | 20907/2017 |
| Misuse of public funds | Article 432 and concordant | Oriol Junqueras, Jordi Turull, Raül Romeva, Dolors Bassa | 20907/2017 |
| Disobedience | Article 410 and concordant | Meritxell Borràs, Carles Mundó and Santi Vila | 20907/2017 |

On 7 March 2018, theOffice of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights reminded Spanish authorities that "pre-trial detention should be considered a measure of last resort", referring to the Catalan politicians and activists arrested after the independence referendum.[67]
On 15 October 2018,Amnesty International requested the immediate release of the two activists Sánchez and Cuixart (known as theJordis since they share their first name), stating that the maintenance of provisional detention was unjustified and considering it an excessive and disproportionate restriction of their rights to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, although without referring to them as prisoners of conscience.[68][69] In November 2018, Amnesty International's Campaigns Director for Europe, Fotis Filippou, announced in a letter addressed to theJordis that he would supervise the trial "to analyze whether the guarantees of a fair trial were met".[70] Days before the beginning of the trial, Amnesty International asked the Court to allow its observers to attend it in order to evaluate that the guarantees of a fair trial were fulfilled. The Supreme Court refused their request arguing that publicly broadcasting the trial was enough.[71]
On 21 November 2018, more than 120 professors and law professors published a letter in the digital newspapereldiario.es stating that neither the acts of 20 September nor 1 and 3 October 2017 saw the violence required in a crime of rebellion.[72] A group of MEPs stated that they wanted to attend the trial as observers.[73]
On 22 November 2018, theWorld Organisation Against Torture requested in an open letter addressed to the Spanish government, the Attorney General, and the ombudsman, the immediate release of Jordi Sànchez and Jordi Cuixart. The same organization recalled that they had requested for their release several times without success.[74] The day after, the NGOFront Line Defenders also issued a statement calling for the release of Cuixart.[75][76]
In December 2018, theInternational Association of Democratic Lawyers issued a statement requesting the release of "Catalan political prisoners".[77]
On 1 December 2018, Jordi Sànchez and Jordi Turull declared that they were starting ahunger strike to protest against the Constitutional Court's obstacles to their appeals for protection, not allowing them to go to theEuropean Court of Human Rights.[78] At the time after the strike began, the Constitutional Court had eight appeals admitted without a mention of the two prisoners, with them having filed the first appeal on 22 November of the previous year. According to the law on criminal prosecution, these appeals should have been resolved within a maximum period of 30 days. On 3 December 2018, Josep Rull and Joaquim Forn declared that they would join the hunger strike on the following day.[79]
On 19 December 2018, ex-presidents of the Generalitat, former speakers of the Catalan Parliament, and the Catalan Ombudsman (Síndic de greuges) made a public request for the politicians on hunger strike to bring it to an end. They argued that the hunger strike had already given visibility to their situation and was putting their lives in danger. A day later, the prisoners declared that they were stopping the hunger strike, since the protest "has awakened the Constitutional Court" and also since the court had already scheduled the resolution of the appeals filed.[citation needed]
More than 500 parliamentarians and former parliamentarians from 25 different countries signed a manifesto calling for the release ofCarme Forcadell. Among these signatories were 35 MEPs and the presidents of the parliaments ofFlanders,Corsica,Faroe Islands and theBasque Country. This initiative was promoted by the ex-presidents of the Catalan parliamentErnest Benach,Núria de Gispert andJoan Rigol.[80]
On 16 January 2019, the former presidents of the Catalan Parliament, and theGeneralitat de Catalunya, along with the Ombudsman at their request, signed an official statement addressed to the Supreme Court asking them to "guarantee the right of defense for the defendants". They requested alternative measures other than imprisonment during the trial for the defendants, as these measures, including daily transfers to and from the prison and extended waiting times in their cells, could "difficult continuous contact with their lawyers and limit active participation in their defense for no legal reason, thus restricting their right".[81]
On 21 January 2019, thePEN Club International presented a manifesto signed by 148 PEN members from 100 countries around the world, denouncing the "disproportionate charges of sedition and rebellion" against the Jordis.[82] Nobel Prize winnerMario Vargas Llosa resigned from PEN International in disagreement with the manifesto, claiming it had been pushed by the Catalonian branch of PEN International as part of an "international campaign to disfigure the truth" carried by pro-independence activists.[83]
On 30 January 2019, the vice president of theEuropean Commission,Frans Timmermans stated that the institution has "no reasons to doubt that theright to a fair trial is guaranteed." He added that he has no evidence pointing to "breaches of the principle of theseparation of powers or issues in relation to judicial independence in Spain." in reply to a parliamentary question byJosep Maria Terricabras from the pro-independenceRepublican Left of Catalonia party.[84]
The day before the beginning of the trial, 11 February 2019, theUnrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization expressed their support to "the Catalonian activists being tried" and added that "perhaps one of the biggest deficit of justice and deliberate confusion between law and justice, is seen in Catalonia.".[85] On the same day, theEuropean Democratic Lawyers association requested the "immediate" release of the Catalan leaders and expressed their "concern" due to a "lack of procedural guarantees during the trial".[86] The day after, theInternational Commission of Jurists denounced the trial "unduly restricts rights of freedom of expression, assembly and association".[87]
On 29 May 2019, the United NationsWorking Group on Arbitrary Detention urged Spain to release Junqueras, Cuixart and Sànchez and to investigate their "arbitrary" detention and the violation of theirs rights, as well as compensating them for the time spent in jail. The Spanish government criticised the report, arguing that the reasoning for their opinion did not take into account some of the alleged crimes. Spain's government issued a statement that raised "doubts" about the group's "independence and impartiality" and called on the U.N. to make sure that its semi-independent working groups are not used "for spurious purposes".[88][89]
On 14 October 2019, a guilty verdict was made public by the Supreme Court of Spain. Nine of the twelve accused were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 9 to 13 years after being found guilty of sedition and some of them also with misuse of public funds. This verdict caused various reactions:[90]
Amnesty International called for the immediate release of Jordi Cuixart and Jordi Sànchez and denounced the "vague" and "overly broad" interpretation of sedition by the Spanish Supreme Court, stating that it could have negative effects on the freedom to protest in Spain.[91] On the other hand, it also stated that there is no reason to believe this trial to be unfair according to international standards.[92] Furthermore, Amnesty International does not recognize the convicted senior officials as political prisoners orprisoners of conscience.[93]



As soon as the verdict was made public, large crowds of protesters gathered atBarcelona-El Prat Airport following instructions by various pro-independence associations. The protest caused 108 flights to be canceled. National and regional police charged against the demonstrators to disperse the crowds blocking the access to the airport. Some of them threw rocks, cans and used fire extinguishers.[90][94] Police responded with anti-riot tactics including using batons and foam bullets. 131 protesters and 40 police officers (34 from theMossos d'Esquadra and 6 from thenational police) were injured as a result of the clashes at the airport and elsewhere on that day.[95][96]
Protests also sparked in multiple places across Catalonia. There were also police charges at theVia Laietana in downtown Barcelona after demonstrators gathered at the national police headquarters, started throwing various objects at the agents who were guarding it.[97] Protesters also blocked various roads across Catalonia as well as part of the train infrastructure and some metro stations.[98] Protesters demanded freedom for the prisoners shouting "This is not justice, this is revenge".[90] The transportation shutdown tactics have been described as inspired by or similar to the2019–20 Hong Kong protests.[99][100][101]El País reported that the leaderless groupDemocratic Tsunami started the airport protest, with one of its members shouting "we're going to do a Hong Kong" inCatalunya Square before the airport shutdown.[100]
The protests continued into a second day, with groups of demonstrators in towns and cities across Catalonia. Though they started peacefully, some protestors began throwing small items at the police, with some in Barcelona setting fire to public litter bins. The regional government said that violence was limited, and performed by "small groups [that] infiltrated"[102] the peaceful protests. Protestors also remained at the airport, cancelling another 40 flights. More protests were organised for the rest of the week, leading up to a regional strike organised by trade unions on the Friday.[99]
This sectionneeds expansion with: more reactions and consequences. You can help byadding to it.(September 2023) |
In June 2021, the nine jailed leaders werepardoned. Prime MinisterPedro Sánchez said that he pardoned them because it was the best decision for Spain and Catalonia, but did not overturn their bans from holding public office. The leader of the conservativePeople's Party,Pablo Casado, reacted negatively, saying "During the [election] debate in 2019, I asked Sánchez several times whether he was going to pardon the prisoners and strike a deal with them, he denied it and promised to make holding illegal referendums a crime … He lied to Spaniards and he will have to answer at the ballot box.” The PP and other opposition parties planned to appeal the pardon.[4]
In 2023, Pedro Sanchez gave the leaders anamnesty following the negotiations in the aftermath of the2023 general election, leading to the2023–2024 Spanish protests against theAmnesty Law.