A Brazilian tax appeals court ruled on Wednesday that Barcelona forward
Neymar could cede his image rights to family businesses and dismissed
charges by federal auditors that they were front companies set up to
dodge taxes.
Neymar still faces other rulings by the court on charges of evading
Brazilian taxes on his controversial 2013 transfer to Barcelona.
The initial ruling, however, will halve the penalty of 200 million reais
($64 million) in fines, back-taxes and interest that Brazil's tax
office had slapped on the soccer star, his lawyer Marcos Neder told
reporters.
Brazil's federal tax office charged the soccer player in 2015 with
evading 63 million reais in taxes due on income earned from Santos and
Barcelona soccer clubs and sponsors between 2011 and 2014. Neymar
appealed last year.
Auditors failed to prove their case to the appeals court that Neymar
should have paid individual income tax of 27.5 percent on the earnings
instead of the lower corporate tax rate he used in tax returns.
Once the tax office case is decided, federal prosecutors are expected to
charge Neymar and his father in criminal court for tax evasion and
fraud.
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