A Spanish judge on Monday rejected a prosecutor's request to drop charges of tax fraud against Lionel Messi and ordered the investigation into three cases of suspected unpaid taxes to proceed.
A court statement said there was "sufficient evidence" to believe the Barcelona and Argentina star "could have known and consented" to the creation of a fictitious corporate structure to avoid paying taxes on income from his image rights.
The statement was issued by the court in Gava, Barcelona, that was initially called on by prosecutors to investigate if there was a case for Messi and his father to answer.
In June, Messi's public relations firm said a prosecutor had agreed to drop the tax fraud case against the player and his father.
Messi's father, Jorge Horacio Messi, is under investigation for an alleged $5.3 million in unpaid taxes from 2007-09. He made a payment of more than $6.6 million in August 2013 to cover alleged unpaid taxes, plus interest.
Monday's statement said it was not necessary for Lionel Messi "to have full knowledge of all accounting or corporate transactions or the exact amount of the fraud" for him to have had a clear idea of an intention to defraud.
Spain has been cracking down on tax evasion as it fights to repair the country's public finances after a prolonged recession triggered by the collapse of its once-booming real estate sector.
Finance Minister Cristobal Montoro has warned professional soccer players they should make sure they are "comfortable" with their tax affairs.
Lionel Messi arrives at court in Gava, near Barcelona, last September to answer questions in a tax fraud case. A judge on Monday rejected a prosecutor's request to drop charges of tax fraud against Messi and ordered the investigation into three cases of suspected unpaid taxes to proceed. Emilio Morenatti / Associated Press |
(China Daily 07/30/2014 page24)