Cristiano Ronaldo denies accusations of tax fraud in Spain
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[June 14, 2017]
By Emma Pinedo and Angus Berwick
MADRID (Reuters) - Soccer star
Cristiano Ronaldo denied on Tuesday ever hiding any income from the
taxman or committing any tax fraud in Spain, after prosecutors filed
a lawsuit accusing him of defrauding tax authorities of 14.7 million
euros ($16.5 million).
The prosecutor's office said the Real Madrid forward had knowingly
used a business structure created in 2010 to allegedly hide his
image rights income in Spain between 2011 and 2014.
This involved a "voluntary" failure to comply with his tax
obligations in Spain, the statement from the office's economic
crimes section said. The four counts of tax fraud were based on a
report from Spain's tax agency, it said in a statement.
Ronaldo denied the accusations through his representatives late on
Tuesday.
"There is no tax evasion scheme ... There has never been any hiding
nor any intention to hide anything," Gestifute, the agency
representing the player, said in a statement.
Gestifute said it would publish documents to show the Portuguese
player had not created such a structure and had instead used firms
he had owned since his time at Manchester United that both British
and Spanish tax authorities had been aware of.
The agency also said the case could relate to different
interpretations between the British and Spanish tax systems over
where to declare some revenues but would in any case not constitute
fraud.
Ronaldo, who led Real Madrid to their 12th European Cup earlier this
month, is the latest in a long line of soccer players in Spain -
among them Barcelona's Lionel Messi and Neymar - to be caught up in
cases over tax or transfers.
Between 2005 and 2010, foreign players in Spain were protected under
the so-called "Beckham law" allowing them to curb their taxes. But
as the financial crisis bit deeper, that exemption was lifted,
paving the way for the cases.
The prosecutor's office alleges that Ronaldo had defrauded the tax
authorities of 1.4 million euros in 2011, 1.7 million euros in 2012,
3.2 million euros in 2013 and 8.5 million euros in 2014.
IMAGE RIGHTS
The prosecutor said that after Ronaldo signed a contract to join
Real Madrid in December 2008 he ceded his image rights to a company
called Tollin Associates Ltd, domiciled in the British Virgin
Islands and in which he was the only stakeholder.
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Portugal’s Cristiano Ronaldo gestures Reuters / Kacper Pempel
Tollin Associates then ceded his image rights to a
company in Ireland called Multisports&Image Management Ltd which was
responsible for managing them. Tollin Associates itself had no
business activity, the statement said.
"Ceding image rights to (Tollin Associates) was completely
unnecessary and its only purpose was to create a screen to conceal
the totality of his image rights income from the Spanish tax
authorities," the statement said.
The prosecutor's office filed the lawsuit against Ronaldo on Tuesday
to a court in the Madrid district of Pozuelo de Alarcon.
Ronaldo finished the soccer season scoring two goals in a 4-1
victory over Juventus in the Champions League final to become the
tournament's top scorer with a total of 12 goals.
In May, Spain's Supreme Court rejected an appeal by Messi and stood
by a Catalan regional court's 21-month prison sentence for
defrauding authorities of 4.1 million euros on image rights. He is
unlikely to go to prison as under Spanish law sentences under two
years can be served under probation.
Spain's High Court last month cleared Neymar of fraud but he still
faces a corruption trial in Spain in connection with the value of
his 2013 transfer from Santos to Barcelona. He has denied
wrongdoing.
($1 = 0.8921 euros)
(Writing by Julien Toyer; Editing by Alison Williams and Gareth
Jones) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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