Lionel Messi's 21-month prison sentence set to be swapped for fine worth less than one week's wage

Authored by independent.co.uk and submitted by TragicDonut
image for Lionel Messi's 21-month prison sentence set to be swapped for fine worth less than one week's wage

The Barcelona state prosecutor said on Friday it was not opposed to substituting a 21-month prison sentence for a fine for tax fraud handed down to Lionel Messi, as long as the fine was the maximum allowed under law.

The maximum fine would be €255,000, on top of a nearly €2m fine paid by the 29-year-old as part of last year's sentence.

Neither is the prosecutor opposed to suspending the Barcelona players's prison sentence, and that of his father, on proviso that they have no more brushes with the law for three years given that both have had clean criminal records up to now.

The decision means that the 21-month prison sentence has been swapped for a fine worth less than Messi’s weekly wage.

Messi and his father Jorge were found guilty by a Catalan court last July on three counts of tax fraud between 2007 and 2009 to the tune of €4.1m on image rights.

The Argentine was never expected to serve time in jail. Under the Spanish system prison terms of under two years can be served under probation.

The judge in charge of the case will now make a decision bearing in mind the prosecutor's recommendations. Judges usually follow the state prosecutor's recommendations in Spain.

barca4barca on June 23rd, 2017 at 20:08 UTC »

Call me a conspiracy nut but Messi basically got the most sever sentence short of prison. Currently the prosecutors office has opened cases into other footballers that relatively didn't paid a lot more tax [compared to Messi] and did it at an older age [Messi was sentenced for not paying enough tax when he was 18-19 years old]. So if Messi's case is used as precedent all the other people will most likely see a jail cell. So they reduced Messi's punishment so that the other cases will not result in actual prison sentences.

Edit: Also due to the law the limit he can pay is 500 a day. So the total he paid was ~250k, which is about 2 weeks of wages after taxes

earthcircumnavigator on June 23rd, 2017 at 19:58 UTC »

This is why so many rich people dodge taxes in Spain, because there's virtually no punishment.

joephusweberr on June 23rd, 2017 at 19:05 UTC »

One of the Nordic countries had a good way of implementing fines where they based it off of your income. Basically if you got a speeding ticket it would cost more if you made more.