Cristiano Ronaldo ‘Accepts’ 2-year Suspended Prison Sentence To End Tax Scandal

Five-time Ballon d’Or winner, Cristiano Ronaldo has accepted a two-year suspended prison sentence and paid Spanish authorities over 12million Pounds as part of deal to end tax dispute.

Cristiano Ronaldo has paid the Spanish tax man £12.1million and accepted a two-year suspended prison sentence.,
Dailymail UK reports.

It appears the 33-year-old Juventus forward is wasting no time clearing debts and cutting all ties with Madrid and Spain following his transfer from Real to Juve. There are also suggestions he plans to pull his business interests out of the capital.

Spanish radio station, Cadena Cope reported that Ronaldo has deposited the £12.1m and will also pay a further £4.7m in fines and costs. He will never have to serve the prison sentence because first offences for administrative crimes involving terms of two years or less are not custodial in Spain.

One of the primary reasons for leaving Spain has always been his anger at tax authorities for taking him to court for fiscal fraud and just one week after his departure to Italy he has wiped his debt with the treasury.

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The player is also understood to have put his £4.8m Madrid mansion in the exclusive ‘La Finca’ neighbourhood on the market and is seriously contemplating closing all his business interests in the Spanish capital.

It is a dramatic cutting of ties that could include abandoning a hotel project in the city’s emblematic avenue ‘Gran Via’.

Ronaldo, in a joint venture with Portuguese company Pestana, had gained a building license earlier this year to convert one of Gran Via’s historic buildings into a 160-room luxury hotel with roof-top bar but Portuguese media now say that project could be shelved.

Ronaldo has always protested his innocence against claims he wilfully deceived the Spanish treasury by not declaring image-rights earnings between 2011 and 2014.

He was furious at being treated like a criminal despite the fact he voluntarily made attempts to put his tax affairs in order in 2014 by making an extra payment of £5m.

He felt the prosecution’s accusation was a result of a difference of interpretation of Spain’s complicated tax laws on image rights and should not have resulted in criminal proceedings.

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He was determined to leave Spain last summer but ended up staying because Real Madrid refused to lower his €1bn (£890m) release clause.

With the prospect of a new contract he then settled on staying in Spain and paying his tax debt, with the help of a new signing bonus, but when Madrid’s contract offer arrived in January it did not meet his expectations.

This summer they were willing to bring his release clause down and with Juventus paying Real Madrid £100m he was able to leave. He will earn significantly more in Italy, not least because the tax situation will be far more favourable in Italy.