Spanish king’s son-in-law charged in fraud case

MADRID,  (Reuters) – The Spanish king’s  son-in-law was charged yesterday in a fraud and embezzlement  case that has damaged the royal family, which this week took the  uprecedented step of disclosing its income.

The Palma de Mallorca court did not specify the charges  against Inaki Urdangarin, the Duke of Palma, a retired Olympic  handball player married to King Juan Carlos’s younger daughter,  the Infanta Cristina.

It ordered him to testify in an investigation into alleged  misuse of millions of euros in public funds at his non-profit  Noos Institute, which he ran from 2004 to 2006.

Urdangarin has denied wrongdoing, but he apologised publicly  this month for the embarrassment his legal problems were causing  the royal family, which he said had nothing to do with his  business affairs.

The investigation found evidence of misuse of public funds,  forgery and fraud in 2003 to 2006, a period when Noos had income  of 15 million euros ($19.4 million), according to local press  reports.

They said Noos organised two tourism conferences for the  Balearic Islands, charging 2.3 million euros, and channelled  more than half of that money to for-profit companies owned by  Urdangarin or his business partners, for items such as  logistical support.

The same pattern was detected in sports summits staged in  Valencia. The probe also found that Urdangarin’s companies were  not able to justify the payments, the press reports said.

The royal family has “absolute respect” for court decisions,  a spokesman said.
The case against the duke is one of several big fraud  scandals in Spanish courts, most of them dating to the real  estate and urban development boom before the global financial  crisis when local governments went on spending sprees.

Spain’s royals have distanced the duke from official events.  He and his wife and four children moved in 2009 to Washington,  where he represents Spanish telecoms group Telefonica.

In a display of transparency apparently prompted by the  case, the royal family disclosed income details on Wednesday for  the first time, showing that the king and his immediate family  received 814,128 euros last year for personal expenses.

Most of their living expenses, including housing, official  travel, security, state dinners, utility bills, palace staff and  transportation, are covered under other budgets, such as the  foreign ministry, the interior ministry and the presidency.
A monthly opinion poll by the Social Research Centre, or  CIS, shows that the historically high approval ratings for the  royal family have fallen this year.