Berlusconi’s sentence cut to 1 year

Agence France-Presse

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Italy's former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi was charged guilty of falsely declaring payments to avoid taxes

ROME, Italy (UPDATED) – Former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi’s four-year prison term for tax fraud was cut to one year Friday, October 26, a Milan court said soon after passing sentence.

Berlusconi is benefitting from a 2006 amnesty law, approved by the leftist government of the time, aimed at reducing prison overcrowding.

Berlusconi was earlier sentenced to four years in prison for tax fraud connected to his Mediaset television channels and was banned from holding public office for three years by a Milan court.

Berlusconi was accused of having artificially inflated the price of film distribution rights bought by shell companies, then selling these back to his Mediaset empire.

The court also sentenced Berlusconi and 10 co-defendants to pay 10 million euros ($13 million) to Italian tax authorities, a statement said.

The tax scam helped to create secret overseas accounts and reduce profits to pay fewer taxes in Italy.

The prosecution had asked for a prison sentence of three years and eight months for Berlusconi.

Prosecutor Fabio De Pasquale said in June that Mediaset costs for the films had been inflated by 368 million dollars from 1994 to 1998, and by 40 million euros from 2001 to 2003.

Berlusconi was at “the top of the chain of command in the sector of television rights until 1998”, De Pasquale said at the time.

He had asked for a prison sentence of three years and four months for Mediaset president Fedele Confalonieri.

But Berlusconi’s close aide in his business dealings was acquitted on Friday. – Agence France-Presse

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