García Ortiz has already received the first sentence

And it's not just the usual right-wing media outlets, which went hunting as soon as they smelled the trail of blood. Some of the publications considered progressive or friendly are also beginning to distance themselves from it, considering it a dead weight to be left behind: the editorial knife is already breaking the rope. The Country, for example, opens its cover with a laconic headline: "Judge prosecutes Attorney General." It's a dry formulation, which emphasizes the clash between the two authority figures and thus diverts attention from the alleged misconduct. It also does The Vanguard, very Sanchista in this last stage, with "The Supreme Court leaves an attorney general on the edge of the dock for the first time." The World, on the other hand, headlines: "The Supreme Court will try the Attorney General for having committed a crime on the orders of the government." In this case, we are no longer dealing with a clash between judges of different political persuasions, but rather between an institution and a criminal under the orders of the government. The case is for the disclosure of secrets, but the newspaper clings to the judge's argument to smear Sánchez.'Abc He also talks about "committing crimes on the orders of the government," but at least he puts some kind quotation marks around it.
In any case, the data is bad for García Ortiz. The Newspaper portrays him as someone who should be packing his bags ("Attorney General clings to post after Supreme Court indictment") and The Country He dedicated an editorial to the case, calling the decision to prosecute him "unusual," but took the opportunity to say that if it's confirmed that he will be in the dock, the best thing he can do is resign. This means that everyone assumes the prosecutor will suck up. And this will be the second sentence García Ortiz will receive, because the first, that of the media that had supported him until now, has already been handed down.