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Ana Garrido Ramos: Difference between revisions

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Somehow the [[anti-corruption]] organisation [[Manos Limpias]] ("Clean Hands") received the document, which it submitted to the {{Interlanguage link multi|Fiscalía Anticorrupción|es}} (a special committee of the Spanish Procurator-fiscal),<ref name="20mins">{{Cite web|title=Un juez condena al Ayuntamiento de Boadilla por acoso laboral a una testigo de la Gürtel |url=http://www.20minutos.es/noticia/2051135/0/ana-garrido/gurtel-acoso/denuncia-condena/ |language=es|trans-title=Judge condemns witness intimidation in the Gürtel case |access-date=30 September 2016 |website=www.20minutos.es |publisher=[[20 minutos]]|date=6 February 2014|first=D.|last=Fernández}}</ref> which prompted them to start investigations into what was to become the [[Gürtel case]].<ref name="art"/> The 2011 indictment by [[examining magistrate]] [[Baltasar Garzón]] precipitated González Panero's resignation as mayor. In 2011 elections a new mayor, [[Antonio González Terol]], took charge. González Panero returned to his managerial post as leader of the Youth Section until, in 2013, he was accused of [[workplace bullying|workplace harassment]].<ref name="20mins"/>
 
Garrido Ramos developed clinical depression due to her treatment at work.<ref name=BBC161004/> In 2014, the [[employment tribunal]] of [[Móstoles]], Madrid [[subpoena]]ded Garrido {{lang|es|da por probada la situación de acoso laboral sufrida por Ana María Garrido Ramos}} ("To give evidence in the case of [[workplace bullying|workplace harassment]] suffered by Ana María Garrido Ramos"),<ref name="eplural"/> whereon the Ayuntamiento de Boadilla terminated her employment with an [[out-of-court settlement]] of {{euro|96000|link=yes}} for "{{lang|es|daños morales}}" ("moral damages"). Due to an appeal by Boadilla town hall, she has not received the sum as of September 2016.<ref name=BBC161004/>
 
Garrido Ramos has advocated a law to improve [[whistleblower protection]]<ref name=BBC161004/> ({{lang|es|Protección al Denunciante de Corrupción}}). Her case has been closed. As of May 2016, she had sold most of her clothes and furniture, rented out her home, and was selling handmade bracelets for a living.<ref name=NYT160514>{{cite news |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/15/world/europe/spanish-activists-push-for-laws-to-protect-whistle-blowers.html |title=Uncovering Corruption Is a Risky Endeavor in Spain |first=Raphael |last=Minder |work=[[The New York Times]] |date=14 May 2016 }}</ref>