Julián Sánchez Melgar

Julián Artemio Sánchez Melgar (born 19 September 1955), is a Spanish judge and prosecutor currently serving as magistrate of the Second Chamber of the Supreme Court. He was the 90th Attorney General of Spain from December 2017[1] to June 2018. Because of being attorney general he was also member of the Council of State. He is considered a Magistrate with a conservative profile.


Julián Sánchez Melgar

OSRP
90th Attorney General of Spain
In office
11 December 2017  29 June 2018
Preceded byJosé Manuel Maza
Luis Navajas (acting)
Succeeded byMaría José Segarra
Personal details
Born19 September 1955
Palencia, Spain
Alma materUniversity of Valladolid
University of A Coruña

Biography

He have a Law degree from the University of Valladolid, and Doctor of Law from the University of La Coruña, with an extraordinary prize.[2]

Acceded to the judicial career in 1983, being destined to the courts of Reinosa, Miranda de Ebro and Mataró, ascending to magistrate by the turn of selective tests, in 1987 (number 2 of its promotion). Destined in the then Territorial Court of Province of Barcelona (antecedent of the Superior Courts of Justice), has served as Judge Dean of the Courts of Santander, magistrate of the Civil and Criminal Chamber of the Superior Court of Justice of Cantabria (1993), president of the Audiencia Provincial de Ávila (1993-2000), and magistrate of the Second Chamber of the Supreme Court.[3]

He has been Vocal of the Governing Board of the Judicial School and was a substitute control magistrate of the National Intelligence Center, until his replacement in December 2017 for his appointment as State Attorney General.[4]

On 24 November 2017, he was appointed by the Government of Mariano Rajoy as the future Attorney General of the State, replacing José Manuel Maza, who died suddenly in Argentina six days earlier.[5] On 7 December 2017, after passing the evaluation the General Council of the Judiciary and of the Cortes Generales, the government approved his appointment[6] and he was sworn in before the King on 11 December.[7] and took the office on 12th[8] [9] On 25 January 2018, he took office as a born member of the Council of State.[10]

After the successful motion of no confidence against the government of Mariano Rajoy, he was dismissed on June 29, 2018 and Maria José Segarra was appointed Attorney General.[11]

Cases

He has been a speaker in the case of Nevenka Fernández against Ismael Álvarez, and in plenary on July 23, 2014 (narco-boats).

He has intervened in the case of the Yak-42, in the Ibarretxe and Patxi López case, in the request for a petition for Bárcenas and Merino at Gürtel case. He has intervened with a private vote in the Emilio Botín case and in the Juan María Atutxa case.[12] He has also intervened in the case of the Historical Memory Law against Baltasar Garzón, in the Marta del Castillo murder case, in the delimitation of Universal Justice and in the case against Pablo Iglesias about illegal funding.[13]

Parot doctrine

He was speaker and main defender of the Parot doctrine, designed to impose full compliance with the sentences of ETA members and others convicted of serious crimes. Despite having been partially endorsed by the Constitutional Court, the Parot doctrine was appealed by Inés del Río and annulled by the European Court of Human Rights,[14][15] considering that it violated articles 5.1 and 7 of the European Convention on Human Rights.[16]

2017-18 Spanish constitutional crisis

On 31 October 2017, the Office of the Prosecutor presented a complaint against the members of the sovereign process of Catalonia after the dissolution of the Parliament of Catalonia; that is, against its president Carme Forcadell and the rest of the members of the Parliamentary Bureau who had voted for the declaration of independence: Anna Simó, Lluís Corominas, Lluís Guinó, Ramona Barrufet i Santacana and Joan Josep Nuet. The Admissions Chamber of the Supreme Court declared itself competent and appointed Llarena as examining magistrate. Among the five members of the Supreme Court who voted in favor of the admission of the complaint by the attorney general, was Sánchez Melgar who, after Maza's death, became head of the Prosecution Ministry.[17]

See also

References

  1. Vázquez, Ángeles; Santos, Pilar (24 November 2017). "El Gobierno elige a Julián Sánchez Melgar como nuevo fiscal general del Estado" (in Spanish). El Periódico.
  2. Doctorado en A Coruña, con una tesis codirigida por el hoy alcalde Xulio Ferreiro (in Spanish)
  3. Real Decreto 1961/1999, de 17 de diciembre, por el que se promueve a Magistrado del Tribunal Supremo a don Julián Artemio Sánchez Melgar. (in Spanish)
  4. El CGPJ designa a Andrés Martínez Arrieta segundo magistrado del Tribunal Supremo para conocer de las actividades del CNI (in Spanish)
  5. El Gobierno propone a Julián Sánchez Melgar como sustituto del fallecido Maza (in Spanish)
  6. El Gobierno aprueba el nombramiento del nuevo fiscal general del Estado (in Spanish)
  7. El nuevo fiscal general del Estado, Julián Sánchez Melgar, jura mañana su cargo ante el Rey (in Spanish)
  8. Julián Sánchez Melgar toma posesión como nuevo fiscal general del Estado (in Spanish)
  9. Sánchez Melgar toma posesión como fiscal general del Estado (in Spanish)
  10. Julián Sánchez Melgar toma posesión como miembro nato del Consejo de Estado (in Spanish)
  11. "María José Segarra is shaping up as the new State Attorney General | Spain". 247newsbeat.com. Retrieved 2019-02-23.
  12. El Supremo cambia la 'doctrina Botín' y condena a Atutxa (in Spanish)
  13. Maza, el nuevo fiscal general, archivó la querella contra Iglesias y es contrario a la 'doctrina Botín' (in Spanish)
  14. El Gobierno elige a Julián Sánchez Melgar para sustituir a Maza en la Fiscalía General (in Spanish)
  15. La «doctrina Parot» fue avalada por el Tribunal Constitucional en marzo (in Spanish)
  16. El magistrado del Tribunal Supremo Julián Sánchez Melgar, nuevo fiscal general del Estado (in Spanish)
  17. El Gobierno elige a Julián Sánchez Melgar para sustituir a Maza en la Fiscalía General (in Spanish)
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