Soccer Star Ronaldo Accepts Fine for Tax Evasion, Avoids Jail

Portuguese soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo was fined almost 19 million euros ($21.6 million) for tax fraud on Jan. 22 but will avoid serving a 23-month prison sentence after agreeing a deal.
Soccer Star Ronaldo Accepts Fine for Tax Evasion, Avoids Jail
Soccer player Cristiano Ronaldo arrives with his girlfriend, Georgina Rodriguez, to appear in court on a trial for tax fraud in Madrid, Spain, Jan. 22, 2019. (Reuters/Sergio Perez)
Reuters
1/22/2019
Updated:
1/22/2019

MADRID—Portuguese soccer star Cristiano Ronaldo was fined almost 19 million euros ($21.6 million) for tax fraud on Jan. 22 but will avoid serving a 23-month prison sentence after agreeing to a deal.

Ronaldo, holding hands with his Spanish fiancée, Georgina Rodriguez, came out of the court room smiling, pausing to sign autographs before leaving in a black van.

The 33-year-old Juventus forward, who played for Real Madrid from 2009 to 2018, agreed to settle the case by paying an 18.8 million euro fine and accepting a suspended jail sentence.

Under Spanish law, a first-time offender can serve anything less than a two-year sentence under probation and Ronaldo will not have to go to prison.

His court appearance lasted about 15 minutes as the five-time world footballer of the year only needed to sign off on the previously settled agreement.

The trial of Ronaldo’s former Real Madrid teammate Xabi Alonso, also in court on Jan. 22 over accusations of tax fraud, was suspended, a court magistrate said.

Prosecutors were seeking a five-year jail sentence and a fine of 4 million euros for Spaniard Alonso, who retired as a player in 2017, accusing him of defrauding the Spanish state of some 2 million euros between 2010 and 2012.

Alonso said he was confident he had not committed a crime and would have to wait while the magistrates evaluated his case.

“I'd be worried if I thought I had something to hide or something I didn’t do right, but as that isn’t the case I am carrying on,” Alonso told reporters outside the court.

Ronaldo had to enter the courtroom through the front door after his request for special security measures to avoid the spotlight was denied on Jan. 21.

In 2017, Ronaldo denied the accusation that he knowingly used a business structure to hide income generated by his image rights in Spain between 2011 and 2014.

After reaching the deal, he paid a fine of 5.7 million euros, plus interest of about 1 million euros, in July 2018, the prosecutor’s office said last week.

By Isla Binnie