Guus Hiddink has been handed a six-month suspended sentence and fined €45,000 after being found guilty of tax fraud by a Dutch court today.
Hiddink, who now coaches the Russian national soccer team, was
accused of evading almost €1.4million Dutch taxes by falsely
claiming to be a resident of Belgium in 2002 and 2003.
The fine was the maximum the court could have imposed, Dutch
media reported.
Earlier this month prosecutors demanded a 10-month prison
sentence for Hiddink, who was not in court to hear the verdict,
dismissing his claims that he had been living in Belgium where the
tax rate is much lower as "a joke".
From 2000 to 2002 Hiddink was in charge of the South Korean
national side, guiding the World Cup co-hosts to fourth place at
the 2002 finals. He then returned to the Netherlands and accepted a
coaching job with PSV Eindhoven.
Hiddink's case came to the attention of Dutch tax fraud
inspectors after telephone conversations with a former PSV director
were monitored by wire taps in a criminal investigation into the
PSV director some years ago.
During the trial Hiddink admitted that he never spent a night
in his house in Belgium but also denied that he lived with his
girlfriend in Amsterdam.
He said he had instead slept in a number of different places
- in hotels, at his girlfriend's home, at the training ground of
PSV Eindhoven, whom he was also coaching at the time, and sometimes
even behind the wheel of his car.