Spain's princess stands trial for fraud

The trial of Spain's Princess Cristina on tax fraud has begun with her lawyers asking for the criminal charges to be dropped.

Spain's Princess Cristina (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti)

Spain's Princess Cristina and her husband Inaki Urdangarin, right, leave a makeshift courtroom on the first day of a corruption trial, in Palma de Mallorca, Spain. (AP Photo/Emilio Morenatti) Source: AAP

Spain's Princess Cristina has appeared in court on charges of tax fraud, the first member of the royal family to stand in the dock, as a lengthy investigation into her husband's business affairs finally went to trial.

King Felipe's 50-year-old sister is one of 18 people on trial after a six-year investigation into the Noos Foundation, a charity run by her husband Inaki Urdangarin, that prosecutors say was used to embezzle millions of euros in public funds.

Details of the probe badly damaged the image of the royal family at a time when ordinary Spaniards were grappling with a devastating economic crisis and tapped into popular disgust at cases of high-level corruption among bankers and politicians.

Cristina arrived with her husband on Monday at the Mallorcan court to be greeted by a barrage of TV and press cameras.

Dressed simply in a grey trouser suit, she sat motionless and unsmiling in the court room fronted by a framed photo of King Felipe during the nearly 13-hour hearing.

Her lawyers asked the three female judges overseeing the trial to drop the criminal charges against her and the state prosecutor said there was insufficient evidence to back up the accusations.

The charges against the princess were privately filed by the "Clean Hands" anti-corruption organisation using a Spanish legal instrument known as the "people's accusation". One of the judges said the court would decide before February 9 whether to drop the charges.

Urdangarin, a former Olympic handball player who was seated apart from his wife in the court, is accused of using his royal connections to win public contracts to put on events through the non-profit organisation.

Prosecutors say some of the foundation's money was transferred to a company largely owned by the princess and Urdangarin and used to pay for personal items ranging from parking tickets to children's birthday parties.

Cristina is charged with two counts of being an accessory to tax fraud and, if found guilty, could face up to four years in prison for each charge - a maximum of eight years.

Urdangarin is accused of nine crimes including fraud and tax evasion with a combined potential jail sentence of 19 and a half years. Urdangarin and his partners allegedly overcharged local governments for putting on conferences about sports and business, then hid the proceeds abroad.

The couple, who have four children, deny any wrongdoing.

The other 16 people in the dock included the former head of the Balearic Islands government and other high-ranking officials from the islands and the Mediterranean region of Valencia.


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Source: AAP



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