The Provincial Court of Barcelona has issued an acquittal in a complex banking fraud case involving €400,000, highlighting the crucial importance of specialized criminal defense in economic crime cases.
In a ruling delivered in January 2026, the court unanimously acquitted two Catalan businessmen who had faced up to 11 years in prison for alleged bank fraud and document falsification. The case, which culminated in a trial held in 2025, represents one of the first major economic crime decisions of 2026 in Spain.
The court concluded that the prosecution failed to prove the essential elements required for fraud under Spanish criminal law: sufficient deception, a determinative error by the financial institutions, and criminal intent.
The Case: When a Liquidity Crisis Becomes a Criminal Accusation
The proceedings began after several banks filed a complaint against two entrepreneurs who had obtained financing through invoice discounting operations and credit facilities between 2019 and 2022.
According to the prosecution, some of the commercial documentation presented to obtain financing allegedly simulated nonexistent commercial transactions, allowing the defendants to receive financial advances totaling €400,000.
The companies operated in the wholesale commercial distribution sector, generating annual revenue of approximately €2.5 million. For several years they maintained regular banking relationships with four different financial institutions, making scheduled payments and periodically renewing credit lines.
However, in mid-2022, amid the post-pandemic supply crisis and rising energy costs, the companies began experiencing serious liquidity problems that eventually resulted in unpaid obligations totaling €400,000.
Bank audit departments later identified irregularities in some commercial documentation, including:
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Invoices issued by suppliers whose activity could not be fully verified
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Companies registered at addresses without apparent business operations
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Commercial contracts whose execution could not be fully documented
Based on these findings, three of the four banks filed criminal complaints in November 2022, alleging aggravated fraud and document falsification.
The Prosecution: Requests for Up to 11 Years in Prison
The Barcelona Provincial Prosecutor’s Office argued that the defendants had deliberately constructed a corporate structure designed to defraud financial institutions.
According to the prosecution, the businessmen created instrumental companies, issued invoices for fictitious transactions, and presented this documentation to banks in order to obtain financing fraudulently.
The charges included:
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Aggravated continued fraud, punishable by 8 years in prison
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Document falsification, punishable by an additional 3 years
Additional penalties requested included fines, a six-year ban from engaging in commercial activities, and civil liability of €400,000 plus interest.
During the investigative phase, the prosecution submitted:
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234 invoices
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Bank statements from 12 accounts
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Commercial contracts
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Accounting expert reports
These materials were presented as evidence that some supplier companies lacked genuine economic activity.
The Defense Strategy
The defense was led by Raúl Pardo-Geijo Ruiz, a lawyer specializing in economic criminal law, whose strategy focused on three central arguments:
1. The existence of real commercial operations
2. The banks’ full knowledge of the corporate structure
3. The absence of criminally relevant deception
To support this defense, the legal team presented documentation verifying 142 complete commercial transactions, including:
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Signed delivery notes
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Transport documentation confirming the movement of goods
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Contracts with end clients
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Email correspondence between companies regarding orders and incidents
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Photographic evidence of goods stored in warehouses
The defense also demonstrated that the banks had conducted extensive due diligence before approving financing operations. Financial institutions had consulted commercial registries, verified financial databases, analyzed company accounts and ratios, and conducted site visits to business facilities.
In fact, the credit facilities were renewed up to seven times between 2020 and 2022, each time following internal risk evaluations by banking committees.
Two expert reports played a key role in the defense:
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A commercial auditor specializing in the distribution sector, who verified the documentation of transactions
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A former bank risk director, who explained the professional obligations of banks when evaluating credit risk and the fact that financial institutions knowingly assume such risks
The Judgment: Legal Grounds for Acquittal
In its 57-page ruling, the Provincial Court of Barcelona analyzed each element of the offense of fraud.
The court concluded that sufficient deception had not been proven, noting that the defendants had provided banks with full information regarding their corporate structure. Financial institutions had independently evaluated the risks before granting financing and subsequently renewed the credit lines.
Regarding the element of error, the court determined that the banks were fully aware of the group’s structure and had knowingly accepted the financial risk involved.
On the issue of document falsification, the court emphasized that the defense had presented evidence confirming the existence of numerous genuine transactions. Moreover, the prosecution’s experts had not verified the alleged irregularities directly.
Several end clients confirmed that goods had been delivered, contradicting the prosecution’s claim that the invoices were entirely fictitious.
A Key Legal Principle: Criminal Law Cannot Replace Business Risk
One of the most significant aspects of the ruling is its clarification of a fundamental principle:
Criminal law cannot be used to cover legitimate business risks assumed by professional financial institutions.
When a bank grants financing after evaluating risks, it accepts that the operation may fail. That risk does not disappear simply because the borrower later experiences financial difficulties.
The court warned that treating every unpaid debt as a criminal offense would lead to excessive criminalization of commercial activity and misuse criminal law as a mechanism for debt recovery.
The Importance of Specialized Defense in Fraud Cases
This case illustrates how specialization in economic criminal law can determine the outcome of complex proceedings.
Fraud and financial crime cases require:
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Advanced knowledge of economic criminal law
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Ability to analyze complex financial expert reports
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Deep familiarity with Supreme Court jurisprudence on fraud
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Technical capacity to reconstruct financial operations and challenge forensic accounting
In proceedings where defendants face long prison sentences, the difference between a general practitioner and a highly specialized defense lawyer can be decisive.
A Landmark Case for 2026
The ruling has quickly become one of the first major reference cases of 2026 in Spanish economic criminal law due to several factors:
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The high financial amount involved
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The severity of the requested prison sentences
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The technical complexity of the evidence
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The clear legal boundary established between criminal fraud and commercial risk
At a time when business disputes are increasingly being litigated through criminal proceedings in Spain, decisions such as this help clarify when failed financial operations belong in civil or commercial courts rather than criminal courts.
The case demonstrates that in complex economic crime proceedings, specialized criminal defense is not simply advantageous—it can be decisive in determining whether a defendant faces imprisonment or acquittal.