The former AC Milan investigation came after the wiretapping of a January 2009 conversation with Luciano Bressi, an official of the Italian Revenue Agency arrested in Milan last June and principal asked by this alleged plot • In the case of the woman Maradona, who also weighed on suspicion of corruption, the Milan prosecutors requested the case file
The Milan prosecutor has asked the prosecution of former captain of Milan and the Italian national football Paolo Maldini, who retired from competition last year for alleged corruption and crime of illegal access to the computer system of the tax in Italy.

According to judicial sources, Pirotta Paola Milan prosecutor has asked the court to research Maldini after he and 42 other people including his wife, Adriana Fossa, for alleged illegal practices to obtain, among other benefits, favorable tax treatment.
In the case of the wife of former footballer, also weighed on suspicion of corruption, the Milan prosecutors requested the case file.
The inquiry Maldini, whose name appeared on the list of the Prosecutor Milan last April, arrived after the wiretapping of a January 2009 conversation with Luciano Bressi, an official of the Italian Revenue Agency arrested in Milan in June last year and principal asked by this alleged plot.
In that conversation, as noted at the time the prosecution, you can hear how Maldini Bressi asks prosecutor to provide information on Alessandro Paolo Baresi, brother of two Italian players, facing a real estate transaction in which it intends to participate with it in the region of Tuscany (central Italy).
Pirotta think Maldini, 42, who retired from professional football in the late 2008-2009 season, was introduced unlawfully, with the help of Bressi, in the computer system of the Inland Revenue purposes "non-institutional."
Furthermore, as can be read in the minutes of research deposited in April, the former captain allegedly contacted Bressi rossonero to avoid this tax controls Velvet society, of which the former football manager and is the majority shareholder and whose representative Fossa is legal.
Former Italian international, through his lawyer, has always denied the suspicions that he has researched and claimed to be "quiet and calm" throughout this issue.