Barcelona superstar Neymar claimed "a great victory" on Thursday after
seeing a €50 million fine imposed by Brazilian tax authorities
reportedly halved on appeal.
Neymar, who has also been fighting a legal battle over his transfer from
Santos to Barcelona in 2013, had argued that he was within his rights
to have his family control his lucrative image rights.
Brazilian prosecutors had insisted that such a procedure encouraged tax
evasion.
The new financial calculation has not been made, but the Folha de Sao
Paulo newspaper estimated Thursday that the original fine of 188 million
reais (about €50 million) imposed in March 2016 could be halved.
"We won a great victory, which belongs to God. Our family businesses
have been recognised as legitimate," the player's father Neymar Santos
said on social media.
On Wednesday, a financial appeals court (CARF), a body linked to the
Economy Ministry, quashed two convictions against the player in relation
to irregularities in the payment of taxes on deals through two
companies created by his father. However, three other convictions were
upheld.
Neymar has also been fighting lengthy legal battles over his move to Barcelona in 2013.
Barcelona had originally published the transfer figure as €57.1 million with €40 million of that given to the player's family.
But Spanish authorities believed the true transfer figure was at least €83 million.
In December last year, a Spanish court ratified a deal that left
Barcelona with a €5.5-million fine but avoiding trial on tax evasion
charges over the contested 2013 transfer.
No comments:
Post a Comment