SUPERSTAR footballer Lionel Messi is being investigated for an alleged £3.4MILLION tax fraud in Spain.
The Barcelona star and his dad, Jorge, are accused of filing fraudulent tax returns from 2006-2009 according to a spokesman for tax crime in Catalonia.
The 25-year-old recognised as the best player in the world and is rumoured to earn £250,000-a-week and £13MILLION in endorsements. Last year the player agreed a new six-year deal with Barcelona worth an estimated £17million-a-year AFTER tax which will run until 2018. He revealed his shock at allegations and insisted he has done nothing wrong. In a statement the Argentine forward hit back saying: "We have just
known through the media about the claim filed by the Spanish tax authorities. We are surprised about this news, because we have never committed any infringement.
Messi - who has won the world player of the year title FOUR times - is one of the world’s highest paid footballers earning around £250,000 a WEEK.
But due to new tax laws in Spain, Messi's new deal will cost Barca a lot more.
Instead of 24 per cent tax they will now pay up to 52 per cent on Messi's salary which means his wages will increase from £10m-a-year to £17m.
Last December Messi turned down a monster £460,000-a-week offer to quit Barcelona.
As well as his Barcelona wages, he earns millions from sponsors including Adidas, PepsiCo and P&G and he is 10th on Forbes’s latest list of top-earning athletes.
He came on for the final half-hour of Argentina’s World Cup 2014 qualifier against Ecuador in Quito on Tuesday which ended in a 1-1 draw.
Argentina coach Alejandro Sabella said Messi is expected to be included in the line-up for their friendly against Guatemala on Friday.