Minister of Justice and Prosecutor General Adam Bodnar reportedly failed to include one of his Warsaw properties in his official asset declaration—an apartment in the Ursynów district, which he purchased in 2005.
No prosze a taki nielegalnie powolany prokurator generalny Bodnar nie wpisał swojego mieszkania do oswiadczenia majatkowego to pytam czy media sciekowe tvn i tvp w likwidacji o onecie juz nie wspomne beda grzac temat?#PrawojakBodnarjerozumie pic.twitter.com/CO0tQ4BObC
— zosiaa-16 (@16Zosiaa) May 8, 2025
Undeclared Property
According to reports, Bodnar omitted from his declaration the fact that he co-owns a 112-square-meter apartment on Wąwozowa Street in Warsaw, jointly with his wife.
Under Polish law on the exercise of a parliamentary mandate, “providing false information or concealing the truth in an asset declaration is punishable under Article 233 §1 of the Penal Code.”
The asset declaration forms include the following warning:
“Anyone who, when making a statement intended to serve as evidence in court or other legal proceedings, provides false testimony or conceals the truth is subject to a prison sentence of between 6 months and 8 years.”
For concealing such information, the Minister of Justice could face up to 8 years in prison.
‼️ @RepublikaTV podaje, że Adam Bodnar zataił w oświadczeniu majątkowym mieszkanie w Warszawie.
— Dariusz Matecki (@DariuszMatecki) May 8, 2025
Do dymisji!