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Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo responds to tax allegations

Cristiano Ronaldo during the 2017 Confederations Cup semi-final between Portugal and Chile
Image: Cristiano Ronaldo has been responding to tax charges

Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo has told a Spanish judge that he has "never tried to avoid taxes".

Ronaldo was questioned in a Madrid court on Monday to determine whether he committed tax fraud worth almost €15m. He spent more than 90 minutes answering the questions of investigating judge Monica Gomez.

According to a statement released by his public relations firm, the 32-year-old told the judge: "I have never hidden anything, and never tried to avoid taxes."

Judge Gomez took Ronaldo's evidence as part of an investigation to determine if there are grounds to charge him.

The session at Pozuelo de Alarcon Court No 1 on the outskirts of Madrid was closed to the public because it is part of an ongoing investigation.

Inaki Torres, head of communication at Gestifute, the agency which represents Real Madrid's Portuguese forward Cristiano Ronaldo speaks to the media after
Image: Ronaldo's spokesman Inaki Torres gave a statement outside the court

In June, a state prosecutor accused Ronaldo of four counts of tax fraud from 2011/14 worth €14.7m.

The prosecutor accused the Portugal forward of having used shell companies outside Spain to hide income made from image rights. The accusation does not involve his salary from Real Madrid and Ronaldo denies any wrongdoing.

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"Spain's Tax Office knows all the details about my sources of income because we have reported them," Ronaldo told the judge, according to his statement. "I always file my tax returns because I think that we should all file and pay our taxes.

"Those who know me know that I tell my consultants that they must have everything in order and paid up to date because I don't want trouble."

Both before and after his court appearance, Ronaldo used an alternative entrance to avoid a large swarm of more than a hundred journalists from Spain and abroad gathered near the main door to the court.

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Court officials had said that either Ronaldo or his lawyer would speak to the media after he saw the judge, but instead the player's spokesman, Inaki Torres, stepped up to the temporary podium in front of the courthouse to announce that Ronaldo "was on his way home".

The prosecutor said in June that Ronaldo used what was deemed a shell company in the Virgin Islands to "create a screen in order to hide his total income from Spain's Tax Office".

The prosecutor accused Ronaldo of declaring €11.5m earned from 2011/14 in a tax return filed in 2014, when the prosecutor said Ronaldo's real income during that period was almost €43m.

It added that Ronaldo falsely claimed the income as coming from property, which "greatly" reduced his tax rate.

The prosecutor also said that Ronaldo did not declare income of €28.4m made from the cession of image rights from 2015/20 to another company located in Spain.

Ronaldo said he told Judge Gomez that his financial planning had not changed since 2004, when he was at Manchester United. He said he kept the same arrangement when he joined Madrid in 2009.

"When I signed for Real Madrid I didn't create a special business structure to handle my image rights, I kept the same one that had been managing them when I was in England," Ronaldo said, according to the statement.

"It was checked out by the English Tax Office and was found legal and legitimate."

In Spain, a judge can suspend sentences of less than two years for first-time offenders.

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