Soccer

Messi offers to pay $558,000 US to avoid 21-month jail sentence

Lionel Messi has offered to pay an additional fine of 500,000 euros ($558,000 US) to ensure he avoids a 21-month prison sentence for tax fraud that a judge is expected to suspend, a Spanish state prosecutor said Friday.

Argentinian's father offered similar deal

Lionel Messi has offered to pay an additional $558,000 US fine to ensure he avoids a prison sentence. (Emilio Morenatti, File/The Associated Press)

Lionel Messi has offered to pay an additional fine of 500,000 euros ($558,000 US) to ensure he avoids a 21-month prison sentence for tax fraud that a judge is expected to suspend, a Spanish state prosecutor said Friday.

State prosecutor Isabel Lopez Riera told The Associated Press the fine-for-time deal was presented by Messi's lawyers to the judge who will rule on whether to suspend Messi's sentence — as is widely expected. Lopez Riera said she has told the judge that her office is not opposed to the deal.

Lopez Riera said Messi's lawyers have made a similar offer for the Barcelona player's father, Jorge Horacio Messi. He is offering to pay 360,000 euros ($402,000 US) to avoid his 15-month sentence for helping his son cheat on his taxes.

In Spain, prison sentences under 24 months for first-time offenders can be suspended by a judge.

The government attorney representing Spain's Tax Office in the case will also be able to weigh in on the proposed deal. As state prosecutor, Lopez Riera is impartial in the case as a defender of the public interest.

Last year, a court in Barcelona found Messi and his father each guilty of three counts of defrauding tax authorities of $4.6 million from 2007-09. The unpaid taxes were from money made through endorsement deals, not Messi's salary paid by Barcelona.

Messi was fined 2 million euros and his father 1.5 million euros. Both were originally sentenced to 21 months, but his father's sentence was later reduced to 15 months.

In the last two weeks, Real Madrid forward Cristiano Ronaldo and former Real Madrid coach Jose Mourinho have been accused by a Madrid-based state prosecutor of having defrauded Spain's Tax Office of millions of euros in unpaid taxes.

Both have denied wrongdoing.