Mourinho Settle’s Spain Multi-Million Spain Tax Fraud Case
Ex-Manchester
United boss José Mourinho has agreed a prison term in Spain for tax fraud but
will not go to jail.
A one-year
prison sentence will instead be exchanged for a fine of €182,500 (£160,160).
That will be added to a separate fine of €2m.
Spain rarely
enforces sentences of less than two years for non-violent or first-time
offenders.
He was
accused of owing €3.3m to Spanish tax authorities from his time managing Real
Madrid in 2011-2012.
Prosecutors
said he had created offshore companies to manage his image rights and hide the
earnings from tax officials.
Image rights
cover the use of a person's likeness, voice, signature and mannerisms - and can
be very lucrative for footballers and managers.
Mr
Mourinho's move to Manchester United in 2016 was even delayed after it emerged
his previous team Chelsea owned the trademark to his name.
Spanish
prosecutors said that Mr Mourinho, a Portuguese national, had set up multiple
business entities in the British Virgin Islands and elsewhere to manage his
image rights.
They argued
that was designed to obscure his financial gain from such deals - and he left
it undeclared in his tax statements after he moved to Spain.
He is the
latest high-profile football personality to strike a deal with Spanish
authorities, which are pursuing a crackdown on tax evasion or fraud by the
country's many resident star players.
In
January, Cristiano Ronaldo accepted a fine of €18.8m and a suspended
23-month jail sentence, in a case which was also centred around tax owed on
image rights.
He was
playing for Real Madrid at the time of the offence between 2010 and 2014 - the
same team Mr Mourinho was managing at the time of his own tax violation.
Unlike the
Ronaldo case, Spanish media were not told about Tuesday's hearing, so there was
no crowd to meet the former Manchester United manager, who lost his job in
December.
Another
former Real Madrid star, Xabi Alonso, is also facing charges over alleged tax
fraud amounting to about €2m, though he denies any wrongdoing.
Marcelo
Vieira, who still plays for the club, accepted a four-month suspended jail
sentence last September over his use of foreign firms to handle almost half a
million euros in earnings.
Barcelona's
Lionel Messi and Neymar have also found themselves embroiled in legal battles
with the Spanish tax authorities.
As in many
of the cases, Mr Mourinho's deal which spared him from prison had been agreed
in advance with tax officials.
Mr
Mourinho's representatives have declined to comment.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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