Díez
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Spain probe targets Socialist party payments to consultant Leire Díez, 3 times more than admitted
The PSOE paid Díez nearly 45,000 euros for communications work between 2015 and 2017, according to documents sent to a Madrid court, as judges probe an alleged scheme to sway cases affecting the party and the government. Spanish authorities are examining payments made by the Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party (PSOE) to former party member Leire Díez, as part of a broader judicial investigation into alleged influence peddling and attempts to interfere in legal proceedings. According to...
PSOE's legal storm: Nine cases closing in on Spanish PM Pedro Sánchez
The government came under increasing pressure this week after authorities searched the Socialist Party's Madrid headquarters. Officers from the Civil Guard’s Central Operative Unit (UCO) spent 12 hours at the PSOE’s national headquarters in Calle Ferraz on Wednesday as part of an investigation into the so‑called Leire Díez case. The operation, ordered by National Court judge Santiago Pedraz, is seeking documents on alleged payments by the party to a network whose alleged aim was to obstruct...
Mutation-dependent responses to sleep and exercise in clonal haematopoiesis
Abstract Clonal haematopoiesis (CH) activates inflammation and increases the risk of atherosclerosis1,2. Whether lifestyle alters CH clone expansion or the phenotypic programming of CH mutant cells, thereby affecting atherosclerosis, is unknown. Here, in humans and mice and across mutations in Jak2, Tet2, Trp53 and Dnmt3a, we demonstrate mutation-dependent responses to sleep and exercise in CH and show that mutant cells are uniquely sensitive to lifestyle.
A child's tooth and strange green stones uncover a 5,500-year-old mystery
A child's tooth and strange green stones uncover a 5,500-year-old mystery A mysterious cave high in the Pyrenees may hold evidence of early copper mining, repeated prehistoric expeditions, and possibly even hidden ancient burials. - Date: - June 3, 2026 - Source: - Frontiers - Summary: - An ancient mountain cave in the Pyrenees may have served as one of the earliest high-altitude mining camps ever discovered, with evidence of repeated visits spanning thousands of years.