Uli Hoeness, president of European football
champions Bayern Munich, has admitted in court to defrauding Germany's tax
authorities of 18m euros (£15m; $25m).
Prosecutors had earlier accused him of
evading a far smaller sum of 3.5m euros in taxes and are seeking a jail term.
The former World Cup-winning German
international footballer, 62, kept the funds in a secret Swiss bank account.
He told the court he deeply regretted
"my wrongdoing".
"I will do everything necessary to
ensure that this depressing chapter for me is closed," he said.
The former Germany forward, who helped the
national team win the 1972 European Championship and then the World Cup two
years later, came clean about his secret bank account last year, filing an
amended tax return in the hope of an amnesty in return for paying the tax he
owed.
But prosecutors say he did so because
investigators were already on his case.
The penalty for tax evasion can be 10 years
in jail, though the prosecution says it will seek a seven-year sentence. A
verdict is expected on Thursday.
Munich state prosecutor Achim von Engel
read out the indictment against Mr Hoeness shortly after the start of the
trial, described as one of the most spectacular of the year by the German
newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung.
He alleged that the defendant had failed to
declare the income he held at Vontobel bank in Switzerland.
Giving evidence later, Mr Hoeness said he
had used the money for large-scale gambling on the foreign currency markets,
losing far more than he ever gained.
"Between 2002 and 2006 I really
gambled with sums that today I find difficult to grasp. For me it was a kick;
pure adrenalin," he said.
It was while he was having lunch with
Chancellor Angela Merkel on 15 January in Berlin last year that he was made
aware of press interest in his finances, he told the court. Vontobel phoned
him, he said. warning him that journalists from Stern magazine were making
inquiries.
Before the scandal emerged, he was
considered to be on good terms with Mrs Merkel, who has since said she is
disappointed with him.
Mr Hoeness said he had already decided to
come clean about his taxes to the authorities.
He is charged with not declaring 33,526,614
euros in tax returns from 2004 to 2009 in income on which he should have paid
3,545,939 euros and 70 cents
Despite the tax evasion scandal, Mr Hoeness
remains a very popular figure at the club he helped build up.
He offered his resignation at last year's
annual meeting but was backed by the supporters and the club's board.
Bayern Munich refused to comment before the
trial but said its chairman and former star Karl-Heinz Rummenigge would speak
after the verdict.
An added potential difficulty for Mr
Hoeness, our correspondent reports, is that the judge in the case, Rupert
Heindl, has been dubbed "judge merciless" in the German press, after
jailing a pensioner in his 70s.
He is thought not to like deals whereby
transgressors avoid jail by repaying what they have gained illegally.
Bayern Munich are facing an important tie
against Arsenal on Tuesday in the last 16 of the European Champions League.
Coach Pep Guardiola said: "We can help him most with a win over
Arsenal."

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