London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Thursday, Jan 29, 2026

Greek Prosecutor Touloupaki

Greece’s Top Anti-Corruption Prosecutor Faces Removal

The job of Greece’s top anti-corruption prosecutor, Eleni Touloupaki, has faced an uphill battle to hold on to her position following a change in government in July of 2019, which brought a political party to power that includes several officials she was actively investigating.
Its most recent legislative maneuver may lead to her ousting.

A new bill presented to parliament on Wednesday by the Ministry of Justice attempts to abolish her office entirely, and replace it with the Financial Crime Department. Critics believe the new department will abandon a probe into whether high-ranking politicians may have received bribes from Novartis, a Swiss pharmaceutical firm that is one of the largest in the world.

Novartis reached a US$347 million settlement last summer with the U.S. Department of Justice (DoJ) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) for violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act – which criminalizes foreign bribery by companies operating on U.S. soil – in which it acknowledged making illegal payments to Greek healthcare providers and officials.

But the settlement did not explicitly address what Touloupaki’s office has, in cooperation with U.S. authorities, continued to investigate since 2017: whether several high-ranking politicians, including two former Greek prime ministers, were involved in the scandal as well.

The alleged bribery allowed Novartis to boost prescription sales at inflated prices, and gain a more dominant position in the Greek healthcare market, despite the fact that Greece was, at the time, facing a severe financial crisis. It has been estimated that the scheme cost the country roughly three billion euros ($3.4 billion).

Antonis Samaras, who served as Greece’s prime minister from 2012 to 2015, was one of several New Democracy party officials named in the investigation, and was quick to aggressively dismiss the allegations.

“Slander is the weapon of cowards, I tell them that they do not touch me. And they can be certain that the slanderers and those behind them will be held accountable to justice,” said Samaras in February 2018, when his party was still the opposition.

After the left-wing populist Syriza party of former prime minister Alexis Tsipras lost power in 2019, New Democracy, led by current prime minister Kyriacos Mitsotakis, began mounting numerous attempts to undermine Touloupaki’s investigation.

Last summer, prosecutors filed criminal charges against Touloupaki, including one felony charge of “abuse of power.”

The Council for Criminal Procedure of Athens denied her request to have the criminal procedure brought against her dismissed, a ruling Adonis Georgiadis, Greece’s minister for development and investment and vice chairman of the ruling New Democracy party, announced on Twitter days before it was officially announced.

Touloupaki subsequently decided to appeal her case to the European Court of Human Rights, arguing that her country’s courts have already presumed her guilt, and that she has therefore not been granted a fair trial.

“The tables have been turned,” Vasilis Chirdaris, a lawyer representing Touloupaki, told OCCRP. “The auditor has become the subject of investigation, and the ones being investigated have become the auditors,” he said.

In addition to her legal struggles, Touloupaki told OCCRP in late August that her home had been burgled. Several documents and computer hard drives were stolen, although nothing else in her home was disturbed.

Days after the incident, Vangelis Triantis, an investigative reporter at Documentonews.gr, said in a posting on Facebook that he too had fallen victim to a burglary after the publication he works for ran stories about the FBI’s investigation into Novartis in January and March 2017. The burglars, he said, stole only laptops from his apartment.

Touloupaki said she was “absolutely convinced” that this was an attempt to silence her investigation into the Novartis bribery scandal, and said she has now become Greece’s number one target, even going so far as to say that she feared for her life.

Wednesday’s proposed bill could be the final nail in the coffin of her years-long investigation, according to her lawyer Chirdaris, who said that in addition to undermining his client, could also set a bad precedent for a country that has long been plagued by corruption.

By merging the anti-corruption prosecutor's office with that of financial crime to form the Financial Crime Department, Cheirdakis explained that the government has resorted to “doing something drastic” that is aimed at removing Touloupaki from assuming any post that concerns government corruption, but it also removes other specialized staff that is equipped to handle other cases of this nature.

“A country like Greece needs a special anti-corruption department,” Cheirdakis said, explaining that political corruption is not the same as the types of theft, embezzlement, or fraud that are typically investigated by the financial crime department that is set to absorb Toulopaki’s anti-corruption office.

Minister Georgiadis welcomed the introduction of the bill, saying on Twitter, “Touloupaki is finished, and the financial (crime) and corruption prosecutor's offices are consolidated.”

Formerly a spokesperson for the Popular Orthodox Rally (LAOS), a far-right populist party, Georgiadis was also under investigation by Touloupaki’s office for his role in the Novartis scandal while serving as Minister of Health.
Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
Starmer Seeks Economic Gains From China Visit While Navigating US Diplomatic Sensitivities
Starmer Says China Visit Will Deliver Economic Benefits as He Prepares to Meet Xi Jinping
UK Prime Minister Starmer Arrives in China to Bolster Trade and Warn Firms of Strategic Opportunities
The AI Hiring Doom Loop — Algorithmic Recruiting Filters Out Top Talent and Rewards Average or Fake Candidates
Amazon to Cut 16,000 Corporate Jobs After Earlier 14,000 Reduction, Citing Streamlining and AI Investment
Federal Reserve Holds Interest Rate at 3.75% as Powell Faces DOJ Criminal Investigation During 2026 Decision
Putin’s Four-Year Ukraine Invasion Cost: Russia’s Mass Casualty Attrition and the Donbas Security-Guarantee Tradeoff
Wall Street Bets on Strong US Growth and Currency Moves as Dollar Slips After Trump Comments
UK Prime Minister Traveled to China Using Temporary Phones and Laptops to Limit Espionage Risks
Google’s $68 Million Voice Assistant Settlement Exposes Incentives That Reward Over-Collection
Kim Kardashian Admits Faking Paparazzi Visit to Britney Spears for Fame in Early 2000s
UPS to Cut 30,000 More Jobs by 2026 Amid Shift to High-Margin Deliveries
France Plans to Replace Teams and Zoom Across Government With Homegrown Visio by 2027
Trump Removes Minneapolis Deportation Operation Commander After Fatal Shooting of Protester
Iran’s Elite Wealth Abroad and Sanctions Leakage: How Offshore Luxury Sustains Regime Resilience
U.S. Central Command Announces Regional Air Exercise as Iran Unveils Drone Carrier Footage
Four Arrested in Andhra Pradesh Over Alleged HIV-Contaminated Injection Attack on Doctor
Hot Drinks, Hidden Particles: How Disposable Cups Quietly Increase Microplastic Exposure
UK Banks Pledge £11 Billion Lending Package to Help Firms Expand Overseas
Suella Braverman Defects to Reform UK, Accusing Conservatives of Betrayal on Core Policies
Melania Trump Documentary Sees Limited Box Office Traction in UK Cinemas
Meta and EssilorLuxottica Ray-Ban Smart Glasses and the Non-Consensual Public Recording Economy
WhatsApp Develops New Meta AI Features to Enhance User Control
Germany Considers Gold Reserves Amidst Rising Tensions with the U.S.
Michael Schumacher Shows Significant Improvement in Health Status
Greenland’s NATO Stress Test: Coercion, Credibility, and the New Arctic Bargaining Game
Diego Garcia and the Chagos Dispute: When Decolonization Collides With Alliance Power
Trump Claims “Total” U.S. Access to Greenland as NATO Weighs Arctic Basing Rights and Deterrence
Air France and KLM Suspend Multiple Middle East Routes as Regional Tensions Disrupt Aviation
U.S. winter storm triggers 13,000-plus flight cancellations and 160,000 power outages
Poland delays euro adoption as Domański cites $1tn economy and zloty advantage
White House: Trump warns Canada of 100% tariff if Carney finalizes China trade deal
PLA opens CMC probe of Zhang Youxia, Liu Zhenli over Xi authority and discipline violations
ICE and DHS immigration raids in Minneapolis: the use-of-force accountability crisis in mass deportation enforcement
UK’s Starmer and Trump Agree on Urgent Need to Bolster Arctic Security
Starmer Breaks Diplomatic Restraint With Firm Rebuke of Trump, Seizing Chance to Advocate for Europe
UK Finance Minister Reeves to Join Starmer on China Visit to Bolster Trade and Economic Ties
Prince Harry Says Sacrifices of NATO Forces in Afghanistan Deserve ‘Respect’ After Trump Remarks
Barron Trump Emerges as Key Remote Witness in UK Assault and Rape Trial
Nigel Farage Attended Davos 2026 Using HP Trust Delegate Pass Linked to Sasan Ghandehari
Gold Jumps More Than 8% in a Week as the Dollar Slides Amid Greenland Tariff Dispute
BlackRock Executive Rick Rieder Emerges as Leading Contender to Succeed Jerome Powell as Fed Chair
Boston Dynamics Atlas humanoid robot and LG CLOiD home robot: the platform lock-in fight to control Physical AI
United States under President Donald Trump completes withdrawal from the World Health Organization: health sovereignty versus global outbreak early-warning access
FBI and U.S. prosecutors vs Ryan Wedding’s transnational cocaine-smuggling network: the fight over witness-killing and cross-border enforcement
Trump Administration’s Iran Military Buildup and Sanctions Campaign Puts Deterrence Credibility on the Line
Apple and OpenAI Chase Screenless AI Wearables as the Post-iPhone Interface Battle Heats Up
Tech Brief: AI Compute, Chips, and Platform Power Moves Driving Today’s Market Narrative
NATO’s Stress Test Under Trump: Alliance Credibility, Burden-Sharing, and the Fight Over Strategic Territory
OpenAI’s Money Problem: Explosive Growth, Even Faster Costs, and a Race to Stay Ahead
×