
Former
Chelsea and Real Madrid defender Ricardo Carvalho has been sentenced to
seven months in prison and fined 142,882 euros [£128,222] for crimes against
the Spanish tax authority, a Spanish court filing said.
Spanish law is such that any sentence under two years for a non-violent
crime rarely requires a defendant without previous convictions to serve jail
time.
Carvalho, 39, who now plays for Chinese Super League outfit Shanghai SIPG,
was found guilty of hiding income from image rights in 2011 and 2012 while
playing for Real, where he played between 2010 and 2013, avoiding 545,981
euros in tax.
He returned the amount and pleaded guilty to the charges, which the court
said in a statement lead to his sentence being reduced from the Spanish
public prosecutor's recommendation of 12 months in prison with a 300,000
euro fine.
Carvalho is the latest player to have fallen foul of tax law in Spain.
In 2016 Barcelona's Lionel Messi was found guilty of defrauding the Spanish
state of 4.2m euros and handed a jail sentence of 21 months.
Real Madrid's top goal-scorer Cristiano Ronaldo attended a court hearing in
July to answer allegations he avoided 14.7m euros. No formal charges have
been made against him.