THISDAY

Sanchez Accepts Jail Sentence for Tax Fraud in Spain

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Manchester United striker Alexis Sanchez has struck a deal with Spanish authoritie­s to accept a 16-month suspended jail sentence for tax fraud in return for avoiding a trial.

Sanchez, who joined United from Arsenal last month, faced being tried over the fraud of €983 000 linked to image rights during his time at Spanish giants Barcelona, according to details of the deal seen by AFP.

Prosecutor­s said the 29-year-old Chilean forward had failed to declare any proceeds from the exploitati­on of his image rights in 2012 and 2013 and had also failed to declare that he was the owner of a company set up in Malta, Numidia Trading Limited, which owned the rights.

Appearing by video link from London, Sanchez admitted he had “made an incorrect tax payment” and that he had settled the issue with tax authoritie­s.

He was sentenced to two eightmonth suspended jail sentences to run consecutiv­ely, although prosecutor­s have called for the sentence to be lifted after two years if he does not re-offend.

Sanchez scored 47 goals in 141 appearance­s for Barcelona before leaving in 2014 to join Arsenal.

He is rumoured to be the highest paid player in the Premier League following his move to United, reportedly earning around £500 000 a week before tax.

Sanchez is one of a number of high-profile players to have fallen foul of the tax authoritie­s in Spain.

In 2016, Barcelona midfielder Lionel Messi was sentenced to a 21-month jail sentence that was eventually reduced to a fine of 2.1 million euros.

Last month, Real Madrid’s Croatian midfielder Luka Modric paid Spanish fiscal authoritie­s close to one million euros to settle his own image rights tax case.

The former Barcelona and Liverpool player Javier Mascherano has accepted a one-year suspended jail sentence over a 1.5-million-euro tax fraud.

In potentiall­y the largest case, Spanish authoritie­s are currently investigat­ing World Player of the Year Cristiano Ronaldo of Real Madrid for tax fraud amounting to €14.7 million.

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