The Argentine will have to defend his case on September
17, but his representatives insist allegations of fraud are baseless and will
be cleared "quickly"
The lawyers of Lionel Messi have insisted the Barcelona
attacker has "scrupulously complied with Spanish legislation" in
response to recent allegations of tax evasion.
Financial crime prosecutors summoned the 25-year-old,
along with his father Jorge Messi, to a court hearing on September 17 after the
pair were adjudged to have committed three offences against the Spanish tax
authorities between 2006 and 2009.
According to the prosecutor's complaint filed at a court
in Gava in northeastern Spain, Messi and his father avoided running up tax
receipts of over €4 million by forwarding the four-time Ballon d'Or winner's
image rights to overseas tax havens.
A statement released by Juarez Veciana Lawyers, the
forward's representatives, read: "We firmly believe the innocence of our
client. He complies scrupulously with Spanish legislation. He has paid what
corresponds to him legally.
"We are confident the judicial investigation will be
resolved in the minimum time possible [to end] this situation which has left
our client in a situation of media defencelessness which we deeply
regret."
Messi's father Jorge, meanwhile, assured that both him
and his son were innocent of any wrong-doing, revealing that they pay their
fair share of tax to the Spanish state.
"That there is a difference of opinion between our
financial advisers and the Inland Revenue is perfectly normal in the case of
people that pay a lot in tax," he told COPE.
"But I can assure you that what we pay annually is
an eight figure number. We are confident an agreement will be reached."
According to reports in Spain, Messi and his father could
face up to six years in prison, along with a hefty fine, if they are found
guilty.
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