Ronaldinho ‘Didn’t Know’ Passport Was Fake, Says His Lawyer

Ronaldinho & his brother Roberto already spent their third night behind bars in the Paraguayan capital of Asuncion.

PTI
Football
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Ronaldinho and his brother Roberto already spent their third night behind bars in the Paraguayan capital of Asuncion.
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Ronaldinho and his brother Roberto already spent their third night behind bars in the Paraguayan capital of Asuncion.
(Photo: AP)

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Brazilian football legend Ronaldinho did not deliberately use a fake passport and should be released by authorities in Paraguay, his lawyer said.

The two-time world player of the year and his brother Roberto, who was detained with him, spent their third night behind bars in the capital Asuncion on Sunday after using forged travel documents to enter the country.

Their Brazilian lawyer Sergio Queiroz said he would ask for the pair to be released and allowed to return to their home country when they next appear before a judge on Monday.

“Ronaldinho did not commit a crime because he did not know that the passport they gave him was faked.”
Sergio Queiroz, Ronaldinho’s Lawyer
Ronaldinho and his brother Roberto were arrested for allegedly entering Paraguay with fake passports and travel documents.(Photo: AP)

Queiroz said that prosecutors had agreed that the footballer had acted in good faith and the decision by a judge to order their detention was unwarranted.

Ronaldinho, considered one of the greatest footballers of all time, was the star of Brazil's 2002 World Cup win and played for Paris Saint-Germain, AC Milan and Barcelona, among others.

Ronaldinho and his brother arrived in Asuncion from Brazil on Wednesday and showed their passports to immigration police, who did not immediately notice any problem with the documents.

Hours later, when the passports were determined to be fake, investigators raided the room Ronaldinho was staying in and seized the brothers' identity cards and travel documents.

Ronaldinho said the passports had been given him by people who had invited him to attend conferences sponsored by charities working with disadvantaged children.

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