Lionel Messi shown during a Barcelona training session last month at the team's Joan Gamper complex. Alejandro Garcia / EPA / September 26, 2015
Lionel Messi shown during a Barcelona training session last month at the team's Joan Gamper complex. Alejandro Garcia / EPA / September 26, 2015

Barcelona’s Lionel Messi and father to stand tax fraud trial in Spain



Argentina and Barcelona star Lionel Messi and his father Jorge are to stand trial on three counts of tax fraud that could carry prison sentences, a Spanish court confirmed on Thursday.

In a court filing, the judge in charge of the case rejected a request by the public prosecutor to try only the footballer’s father.

The pair were accused in 2013 of defrauding the taxman out of €4.16 million (Dh17.2m) in taxes related to Messi’s image rights between 2007 and 2009 through the creation of fake companies in Belize and Uruguay.

Read more: Andy Mitten on the void Lionel Messi's injury is leaving in the Primera Liga spotlight

It is alleged they ceded the player’s image rights to the companies in order to avoid declaring money made from lucrative deals with sponsors in Spain.

No date has been set for the trial, which will take place in Vilanova i la Geltru, the town where the player lives, 50 kilometres (30 miles) south of Barcelona.

Prosecutors had asked for the case against the four-time World Player of the Year to be dropped as they consider the alleged fraud was carried out by his father, who has managed his son’s affairs since he was a child.

They asked for Jorge Messi to be handed an 18-month prison sentence and a fine of half the defrauded amount.

However, lawyers acting on behalf of the tax authorities pleaded for the player also to be tried and for both defendants to face a seven-and-a-half month prison sentence for each individual charge, which could lead to an overall sentence of over 22 months.

In any case, both are unlikely to end up in jail as sentences of fewer than two years are normally suspended for first time offences in Spain.

“There are rational signs that the criminality was committed by both accused parties,” the judge said in the filing.

Both father and son at first denied the accusations and laid the blame on a former financial advisor.

However, Jorge Messi subsequently claimed he was in charge of his son’s finances and pleaded for charges against the player to be dropped.

Jorge also made a corrective payment of €5 million in August 2013 to cover alleged unpaid taxes plus interest, which should mitigate any sentence.

The player’s defence team will present evidence in court that will show that prosecutors were right to recommend that the case against him be dropped, the company that manages Messi’s image rights, Leo Messi Management, said in a statement.

Barcelona backed their star player and expressed surprise at the decision to proceed with the case.

“The club will continue to give its judicial, fiscal and administrative support to the family in this process,” the club said in a statement.

Moreover, the European champions expressed their concern at a number of judicial decisions in recent years that have damaged the club’s image.

Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu and his predecessor Sandro Rosell are also charged with tax fraud for their part in the transfer that brought Brazilian star Neymar to the club in 2013.

Messi, 28, is the fourth richest sportsman in the world, according to Forbes magazine, which estimates he earns almost $74 million (Dh271.8m) a year.

He is widely expected to add a record fifth Ballon d’Or for the world’s best player to his collection on January 11 after leading Barca to a treble of Champions League, La Liga and Copa del Rey titles last season.

However, the trial is just the latest blow for the Argentine, who will be out of action for another six weeks with knee ligament damage suffered in Barca’s 2-1 win over Las Palmas on September 26.

The injury has also forced him to miss the start of Argentina’s World Cup qualifying campaign at home to Ecuador on Thursday.

On the pitch, Barca have struggled without their talisman as the Catalan lub squeezed past Las Palmas and Bayer Leverkusen 2-1 before losing 2-1 at Sevilla on Saturday.

Meanwhile, a separate investigation is being carried out in Barcelona that could lead to another tax fraud case against Messi related to a number of charity matches in aid of his foundation, which were played in South America in 2012 and 2013.

Messi is just one of a number of high-profile footballers in Spain under scrutiny from the tax authorities for the management of their image rights.

His Barcelona and Argentina teammate Javier Mascherano will also face trial on October 29 for failing to declare €1.5 million by ceding his image rights to companies he owns in Portugal and the United States.

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