Bayern Munich President Sentenced To Three-And-A-Half Years
Bayern Munich president Uli Hoeness has been found guilty of
tax evasion and sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison.
The 62-year-old, one of the most powerful figures in German
football, was charged with dodging €3.5 million in taxes through an undeclared
Swiss bank account. But when his trial opened on Monday, he admitted to
avoiding €15 million more.
Then it came out through an examination of documents he
provided to investigators shortly before the trial that he owed €27.2 million
in total.
German news agency dpa reported that prosecutors had
demanded a five-and-a-half-year prison term, while his defence team was looking
for a suspension of sentence on probation, arguing that he had turned himself
in for tax evasion and provided details to the court.
Following the verdict, defence lawyer Hanns Feigen said he
would appeal against the decision to see how a higher court would value
Hoeness’s “not ideal” confession. He added that he was convinced the appeals
court would come to a “better result” than the Munich state court did.
Hoeness will remain free on bail pending the outcome of the
appeal.
German authorities have been cracking down on tax evaders in
recent years, and have recovered hundreds of millions of euro.
Their widely-publicised purchase of leaked account
information on thousands of investors, as well as high-profile cases such as
that against Hoeness and former Deutsche Post AG chief Klaus Zumwinkel, has led
to thousands of people turning themselves in.
Hoeness, who is also part owner of a Nuremberg sausage
factory, reported himself to the tax authorities last April — around the same
time German media were investigating reports of high-profile tax evaders. News
of the case against the national icon prompted even Chancellor Angela Merkel’s
spokesman to weigh in and say the country’s leader was disappointed in him.
As a player, Hoeness was a Bayern star who won the 1972 European
Championship and the 1974 World Cup with West Germany, and three straight
European Cups — the predecessor of the Champions League — before retiring in
1979 with chronic knee problems.
He became the Bundesliga’s youngest coach when he was 27.
Bayern has been enjoying unprecedented success under
Hoeness’s presidency. The club stood by him during the investigation, and its
supervisory board is expected to meet following the verdict to see what steps
to take next. Bayern Munich said it would issue a statement later today.
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