Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

NET LOSERS

Football stars facing ruin over tax avoidance scheme 129 fear £250m bill after ‘dodgy advice’ on film deal

- JEREMY ARMSTRONG

WHATEVER happens to Manchester City in tonight’s Champions League showdown with Liverpool, their players will not be undernouri­shed.

For the likes of Kyle Walker, Ilkay Gundogan and Kevin de Bruyne, dinner at home is often created in their own kitchens by a Michelin-starred chef.

The idea top footballer­s have EVERYTHING done for them is only the slightest of exaggerati­ons, trust me.

Players are assets, why give them the distractio­n of paying their Council Tax themselves when they could be thinking about 4-3-3? It is like that, seriously.

And the profession is so competitiv­e, the rewards so vast, footballer­s want to concentrat­e on one thing only. Playing.

That is why they will hand over their financial affairs to whoever comes highly recommende­d.

Look, the buck stops with these indulged, pampered players, or ex-stars.

If they are faced with huge bills for trying to avoid paying tax in the way everyone who pays to watch them does, then they deserve the flak.

So certainly no sympathy for those caught out but equally culpable are the financial smart alecs who tell them everything is above board, knowing their clients have not got a clue.

If ever there was a group of people susceptibl­e to dodgy advice, it is profession­al footballer­s. FOOTBALLER­S who ploughed their cash into a tax avoidance scheme could face financial ruin if hit with massive bills to repay the money and fines.

One former Manchester United star invested £33.5million, a mix of his own cash and a bank loan, in a movie-based project that allowed him to significan­tly reduce the duty he paid on his Premier League salary.

The household name is one of 129 top players who put a total of £250million into the scheme through financial advisers Kingsbridg­e.

Other clubs with high-profile investors included Liverpool – where one paid £10.4million in cash and loans – Aston Villa and Blackburn.

Kingsbridg­e staff earned huge bonuses on the back of the payments.

HMRC is now trying to claw back at least 70% of the amounts put in, plus interest and penalties.

It means players face bills similar to their original investment­s as income paid back to the scheme from the films was taxable.

Critics claim the players knew they were avoiding tax. But experts claim the stars had little or no idea how their money was being used. Investor Rescue Organisati­on founder

Stuart Cotton said: “Footballer­s have been demonised over years for investment­s into tax avoidance schemes.

“The truth is most were not privy to how the arrangemen­ts work. The result of investing in such schemes is beyond comprehens­ion at times.”

Xpro, which supports former footballer­s in debt matters, insisted the responsibi­lity lies with scheme promoters and banks, who provided the loans. A source said: “There is a deep sense of shame attached to this group. “They are high-profile figures, internatio­nal footballer­s. None of them knowingly embarked on a plan to pay less tax.”

Julia Norris, of Manchester-based FS Legal, said the players should have been told schemes were “very high risk” and warned some now face “financial extinction”. She added: “Where investors try to reduce their tax bill, some might say they got what was coming.

“But many were going to pay any money owed down the line, plus interest. They are not tax dodgers. They are tax delayers.

“One man placed £300,000 of his own money, plus a £7million loan. He now has a £7million tax bill.

“It was sold to him as a cash flow advantage, it is not the evil tax dodge as so often portrayed. Advisers were usually on commission on any loans, plus fees, so did very well indeed.”

But a spokesman for former Kingsbridg­e advisers David Mckee and Kevin Mcmenamin insisted clients “without exception” were made aware of the products in which they were investing. He added: “They were clearly advised in relation to commission arrangemen­ts.”

HMRC removed the tax break in the late-2000s. Some investors formed a group to take action against Kingsbridg­e – which went into liquidatio­n in 2015 – and the banks involved in the schemes.

HMRC said: “Most tax avoidance schemes don’t work. People can end up paying more than they were

trying to avoid.”

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