According to national media reports, Serrano claimed to have received the document via an anonymous email and to have disseminated it without verifying its origin or knowing it belonged to the Local Police of Alcalá de Henares. This explanation has been deemed 'unconvincing' by local socialists.
The PSOE of Alcalá argues that, given Serrano's political career as a senator and second-in-command of the Popular Party in Madrid, he should be capable of identifying an official document and verifying its provenance before making it public.
The only thing confirmed is that a confidential police document was published, which, in their opinion, constitutes a serious event that must be clarified in court.
Socialists also doubt that Serrano would simply publish an anonymous document and suggest a possible leak from the City Council itself, pointing to Mayor Judith Piquet as a potential source of the report's transmission.
It is worth noting that the mayor is currently under judicial investigation for the alleged leak of this police document, an aspect the PSOE considers crucial. The socialists give more credence to the position of the Prosecutor's Office and the court than to Serrano's version.
The PSOE of Alcalá places this incident within a broader political context, linking the report's dissemination to previous statements by regional president, Isabel Díaz Ayuso, regarding immigration and crime.




