On 29 July 2003 a corruption scandal broke out when
Adevărul newspaper accused Puwak of facilitating access for her husband's and her son's companies to some 150,000 non-reimbursable
Euros through the "Leonardo da Vinci" European Union program, while she was in charge of those funds. Puwak denied the accusations, stating the applications had been submitted while she was an opposition MP. The opposition parties of that time,
PD and
PNL, demanded her resignation or dismissal. On 2 September, Puwak demanded that the
anti-corruption prosecutors (PNA) investigate the charges, and on the same day Prime Minister Adrian Năstase declared that the cabinet had full confidence in Puwak. On 4 September, a team from the European Commission's Anti-Fraud Office (
OLAF) arrived to investigate. OLAF spokesman Alessandro Buttice announced on 11 September that his office was opening a case meant to assist the Romanian authorities in investigating allegations against Puwak. On 13 October, PSD's Permanent Delegation (party leadership) decided to continue political support for her and Health Minister
Mircea Beuran, awaiting the conclusion of the EU audit. Nevertheless, on 20 October, she resigned together with Beuran and , the Secretary General of the Năstase government. The same day Năstase presented his proposal for replacements to president
Ion Iliescu, leading to media speculation that the three were fired instead. On 30 October, the
Greater Romania Party, supported by PD and PNL, tried to initiate a parliamentary inquiry commission on the scandal, but this effort was defeated by the majority of the
Romanian Senate. On 19 December 2003 the anti-corruption investigation was closed by prosecutor
Adrian Miclescu without filing any charges. The case was then reopened on 26 August 2005, after the new Justice Minister
Monica Macovei fired him. Eventually the case went to trial, and Puwak's husband, Iosif Mihai Puwak, was sentenced in December 2007 to a 30-month suspended sentence for
embezzling 39,000 euros from the
EU da Vinci funds. He was also ordered to reimburse the money. He appealed, but the appeal was rejected by the
Bucharest Court of Appeals on 4 June 2009. On 9 November 2009 her son Mihai Puwak was sentenced to a three-year suspended sentence for embezzling 32,160 euros from the same EU da Vinci funds, and ordered to reimburse the money. This sentence was final. ==References==