Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho was grilled by a judge in
Spain on Friday over accusations of a 3.3 million euro ($3.8 million)
tax fraud during his time in charge of Real Madrid in 2011 and 2012.
After leaving the brief closed-door hearing, the 54-year-old told
reporters he had paid everything he owed to the Spanish tax office.
“I left Spain in 2013 with the conviction that my fiscal situation
was perfectly legal,” he said outside the court in Pozuelo de Alarcon,
an upscale Madrid suburb where he used to live.
“Two years later I was told that an investigation had been opened and
that to regularise my situation I had to pay a certain amount. I did
not debate it, did not appeal it, I paid and I signed an agreement of
compliance with the state,” he added.
“Everything was settled. This is why I was here for just five minutes
to say the same things I am telling you. I have nothing more to say.”
His court appearance comes just over 48 hours before he is set to return to Stamford Bridge to face old side Chelsea on Sunday.
The Portuguese coach, who wore a suit with no tie, is the latest
high-profile football figure to be questioned over his tax affairs in
Spain.
Spanish prosecutors accuse Mourinho, who coached Madrid between 2010
and 2013, of failing to declare income of 1.6 million euros in 2011 and
1.7 million euros in 2012.
The basis for the case, as with a series of football stars based in
Spain, is how income from Mourinho’s image rights was managed and
declared.
Prosecutors believe by ceding his image rights to a series of
companies based in tax havens, Mourinho committed fraud by not declaring
the income those companies made from his image rights.
– Football leaks –
During his court appearance, Mourinho only answered questions from
his lawyer and refused to take questions from public prosecutors, a
court spokesman told AFP, adding that the Portuguese remains under
official investigation.
Mourinho is just one of a number of super agent Jorge Mendes’s
clients to be investigated in Spain, including World Player of the Year
Cristiano Ronaldo.
Revelations from the whistleblowing website Football Leaks have
lifted the veil on the practices supposedly used by Mendes to optimise
often enormous earnings from image rights by his clients.
Media consortium European Investigative Collaborations has claimed
that no less than 185 million euros worth of income escaped the
attention of tax authorities through the use of shell companies and
offshore accounts.
Other clients of Mendes to be investigated in Spain include the
former Real defenders Fabio Coentrao and Ricardo Carvalho, Colombian
striker Radamel Falcao, now with Monaco but formerly at Atletico Madrid,
and Paris Saint Germain’s Angel di Maria, who also spent four years at
Real Madrid.
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Friday, 3 November 2017
Mourinho testifies in Madrid court over tax fraud allegations
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