Illustration of financier Ariel Vallejo facing money laundering charges linked to football clubs in Argentina.
Illustration of financier Ariel Vallejo facing money laundering charges linked to football clubs in Argentina.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Prosecutor imputes financier linked to Tapia for $818 billion laundering scheme

صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Federal prosecutor Cecilia Incardona has advanced a complaint against Ariel Vallejo, owner of Sur Finanzas and close to AFA president Claudio “Chiqui” Tapia, for an alleged money laundering scheme involving $818 billion. The probe centers on transfers to seven football clubs using low-income taxpayers. Sur Finanzas dismissed the charges as baseless and offered to cooperate with authorities.

Federal prosecutor Cecilia Incardona has formalized the complaint filed by the General Tax Directorate (DGI) against Ariel Vallejo, a financier with strong ties to Claudio “Chiqui” Tapia, president of the Argentine Football Association (AFA). The case, assigned to Federal Judge Federico Villena's court, accuses the Sur Finanzas PSP platform of orchestrating a money laundering scheme worth $818 billion pesos, using a network of low-income taxpayers, fake invoices, and uncategorized individuals to conceal the illicit origin of funds.

Among the recipients of the transfers are civil associations and trusts linked to football clubs such as San Lorenzo, Racing, Temperley, Los Andes, Excursionistas, Deportivo Morón, Defensores de Glew, and the Banfileña Reconstruction Trust. The DGI noted that audits could not obtain data on transfer amounts for five of these entities. Additionally, it alleges tax evasion of $3.3 billion in the Credits and Debits Tax by failing to act as withholding agents through third-party accounts.

The prosecutor requested evidentiary measures including lifting banking secrecy, freezing accounts, and a preventive embargo of up to $4 billion on Sur Finanzas assets. The Banfield trust is under scrutiny, with directors like Eduardo Juan Spinosa already probed in a related laundering case in Lomas de Zamora.

In response, Sur Finanzas issued a statement on social media denying the charges. “The accusations are unfounded,” they stated, emphasizing regulatory compliance, Central Bank authorizations, and no involvement in cryptocurrency operations. “We are at the disposal to collaborate with the Justice to clarify and satisfy all its requirements,” they concluded, noting their advertising on major club jerseys.

ما يقوله الناس

Initial reactions on X focus on prosecutor Cecilia Incardona's imputation of Ariel Vallejo and Sur Finanzas for laundering $818 billion via transfers to football clubs like Racing, San Lorenzo, and others, tied to AFA president Claudio 'Chiqui' Tapia. Sentiments are predominantly negative, calling out corruption in AFA; journalists note judicial delays and suspicions; users link it to broader scandals; Sur Finanzas denies accusations and offers cooperation. Skepticism exists on whether probes will lead to accountability.

مقالات ذات صلة

Dramatic courtroom illustration of AFA president Tapia and treasurer Toviggino facing tax evasion charges, featuring hidden cash in a sock drawer.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Justice processes Tapia and Toviggino for alleged tax evasion at AFA

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

A judge has processed AFA president Claudio 'Chiqui' Tapia and treasurer Pablo Toviggino for alleged tax evasion, ordering embargoes. Diego Amarante argued that Tapia controls fiscal keys and signed balances since 2017. A chat is under investigation regarding US$300,000 allegedly hidden in a sock drawer.

Argentina's Central Bank (BCRA) has fined ARS Cambios SAS, operating as Sur Finanzas and linked to AFA president Claudio “Chiqui” Tapia, 18 billion pesos and banned it from currency exchange operations. The firm conducted over US$25 million in foreign currency transactions from January to December 2023 without verifiable genuine destinations for the funds. Its administrator and her son face individual fines and bans from financial roles.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The Revenue and Customs Control Agency expanded the criminal complaint against the Argentine Football Association. It accused Claudio Tapia and Pablo Toviggino of forming a fiscal illicit association linked to nearly 300 million pesos in evasion through fake invoices.

Judge María Servini ordered a preventive embargo of 859.516 billion pesos on the assets of Elías Piccirillo and other currency exchange operators. The step was taken at the request of prosecutor Carlos Stornelli in a probe into alleged irregular dollar blue operations during Alberto Fernández's government.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Prosecutors have scheduled the formalization of Alberto Larraín and María Constanza Gómez, executives of Fundación ProCultura, for six misappropriation offenses on May 25 in Antofagasta convenios with the regional government and housing ministry. Fiscal Cristián Aguilar filed the request on April 10, led by regional prosecutor Juan Castro Bekios. The probe examines irregularities involving over 500 million pesos in funds.

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