Soccer star Leo Messi is to face trial for alleged tax fraud after a
Barcelona court turned down an appeal made by his lawyers aimed at
avoiding him having to sit in the dock.
The Barcelona Provincial High Court believes there is evidence that
the Argentinean forward “benefited” from a network of companies that
allowed him to defraud the Spanish Tax Agency of €4.1 million in income
tax, regardless of whether or not he had knowledge of the structures in
place.
The court stressed that, in any case, now was not the moment to
decide whether or not the player was aware of the fraud scheme and that
such a decision should be left for the hearing.
The decision, which was made public on Wednesday, means that Messi
and his father, Jorge Horacio Messi, remain under investigation for
three counts of tax fraud committed in the tax years 2007, 2008 and
2009.
Messi senior is alleged to have created the network of companies when
Messi was still a minor. It was used to simulate the handing over of
the player’s image rights, thus allowing him to pay less tax on the
multi-million-euro advertising contracts he landed.
Messi’s defense argued that the player had “never devoted a minute of his life to reading, studying or analyzing” the contracts.
But the judges responded that Messi ratified the contracts once he
turned 18 and his name appeared as the sole administrator of one of the
companies
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