RONALDO FACES MULTI-MILLION TAX FRAUD FINE IN MADRID COURT
Cristiano Ronaldo returned to Madrid on Tuesday
for a court date in which he could be fined 18.8 million euros ($21.4 million)
for tax fraud in a deal reached with the Spanish taxman.
As part of an agreement arranged in June with
the former Real Madrid hero’s lawyers, prosecutors are also asking that the
Portuguese attacker, who last summer left the Spanish capital for Italian
champions Juventus, be handed a 23-month jail sentence.
However, Ronaldo would not spend a day in
prison as sentences of up to two years are generally not enforced in Spain for
first-time offenders in non-violent crimes.
The five-time Ballon d’Or winner did not
speak to the crowd of reporters waiting behind blue police barriers for him to
arrive at the court in northeastern Madrid for the hearing, which is expected
to last just a few minutes as the deal is officially presented to the judge.
Dressed in black and wearing dark sunglasses,
a smiling Ronaldo climbed up the courthouse steps holding hands with his
girlfriend Georgina Rodriguez.
The judge will give the final sentence on
Tuesday or the coming days, according to a court spokesman.
Ronaldo’s lawyers had asked that he be
allowed to enter the building by car to avoid the media spotlight.
But the court president refused the request,
saying that despite his “great fame”, he wouldn’t “compromise security” at the
building, according to a court document.
Ronaldo’s request to appear via
videoconference was also denied.
Offshore Companies
Madrid prosecutors opened a probe into
Ronaldo in June 2017 and he was questioned in July that same year.
“I have never hidden anything, nor have I had
the intention of evading taxes,” he told the court then, according to a
statement from the sports agency which represents him, Gestifute.
Prosecutors accuse him of having used
companies in low-tax foreign jurisdictions — notably the British Virgin Islands
and Ireland — to avoid having to pay the tax due in Spain on his image rights
between 2011 and 2014.
His lawyers said there had been a difference
in interpretation of what was and was not taxable in Spain.
The deal between Spain’s taxman and his
lawyers has allowed Ronaldo to avoid having to sit through a long trial that
could have damaged his image and seen him handed a heftier sentence.
Ronaldo is not the only footballer to have
fallen foul of Spain’s tax authorities.
His former Real Madrid team-mate Xabi Alonso
will appear at the same Madrid court on Tuesday on a separate tax evasion
charge.
Public prosecutors are demanding that Alonso
be handed a five-year jail sentence and pay a fine of four million euros.
Barcelona’s Lionel Messi, once Ronaldo’s big
La Liga rival, paid a two-million-euro fine in 2016 in his own tax wrangle and
received a 21-month jail term.
The prison sentence was later reduced to a
further fine of 252,000 euros, equivalent to 400 euros per day of the original
term.
Accused of rape in US
But Ronaldo’s legal wrangles won’t be over
soon after a probe was opened in October in the United States where a former
American model accused him of raping her in Las Vegas in 2009.
Police in the US city recently asked Italian
authorities for a DNA sample from the footballer.
Ronaldo has always strenuously denied the
accusations.
In a New Year’s Eve interview with Portuguese
sports daily Record, he said he had a “calm conscience” and was “confident that
everything will very soon be clarified”.
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