Spain: Court sets Jan. 11 as trial date for princess

Author: The Associated Press
Published: Updated:
MGN

MADRID (AP) – Spain’s Princess Cristina will stand trial on tax fraud charges on Jan. 11, a court announced Tuesday. She will be the first royal family member to stand trial since Spain’s monarchy was restored in 1975.

Cristina, the 50-year-old sister of King Felipe VI, was indicted as part of a four-year probe into her husband, Inaki Urdangarin, who faces charges of money-laundering and fraud. The Balearic Islands court in Palma de Mallorca said the couple will stand trial next year along with 16 others in the case.

Cristina and Urdangarin, through their lawyers, have repeatedly asserted their innocence.

If convicted she could face up to four years in prison. Urdangarin, a former Olympic handball medalist turned businessman, faces a possible sentence of up to 19 years.

Urdangarin is accused of using his title to embezzle about 6 million euros in public contracts through a nonprofit foundation he and a business partner set up.

Felipe stripped Cristina of her title as Duchess of Palma de Mallorca – which she received on marrying Urdangarin in 1997 – earlier this year in a move to distance the royal family from the court process. Urdangarin automatically lost his title as duke.

Cristina is sixth in line of succession to the throne, and calls have increased for her to renounce her princess title and rights to the throne so as to protect the image of the monarchy ahead of the trial. The couple has been sidelined from royal activities since 2011.

The case was one of several scandals to have affected the royal family under former King Juan Carlos, who abdicated in favor of Felipe last year.

On taking the throne, Felipe said he intended to restore public trust in the monarchy, and opinion polls show his popularity ratings have risen.

In a separate ruling, the Palma de Mallorca court dismissed a petition by Urdangarin’s former business partner for Felipe to testify in the case.

Copyright ©2024 Fort Myers Broadcasting. All rights reserved.

This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.