The Treasury seizes all of Edmundo Arrocet's assets in Spain: "He had four companies without exercise or capital"

The problems continue for Edmundo 'Bigote' Arrocet, this time financially.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
24 October 2023 Tuesday 23:01
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The Treasury seizes all of Edmundo Arrocet's assets in Spain: "He had four companies without exercise or capital"

The problems continue for Edmundo 'Bigote' Arrocet, this time financially. The Chilean comedian, former partner of María Teresa Campos, returned to Spain just a month after the television star's death and, although at first he was reluctant to give statements, he surprised with an exclusive in which he spoke at length about his past relationship.

Arrocet is now in the news for its debts with the Treasury, which Carmen Borrego confirmed on the Telecinco program Vamos a ver. Specifically, the comedian owes the treasury more than 100,000 euros, although this situation in Spanish territory is already well known to him.

And as they have recalled in another space on the same channel, TardeAR, the Treasury already investigated the comedian in 2021. Years ago, in 2014, Bigote suffered up to three incidents with the Tax Agency in the companies he owns dedicated to the audiovisual world.

The journalist Marisa Martín Blázquez has given details of the current situation of the comedian and his companies. "The Ministry has already set its sights on him, so they are going to seize all the assets he has here in Spain," she said in the program presented by Ana Rosa Quintana.

Martín Blázquez assures that Arrocet's problems with the Treasury in 2014 left him with a debt of "more than 700,000 euros, which he later partially remedied with his participation in Supervivientes and several exclusives in magazines." Furthermore, he emphasizes the striking fact that the latest information regarding his relationship with María Teresa has arrived "recently, less than a month" after his death and "just when the Treasury is going to seize him."

Asked what assets Edmundo owns in Spain, Marisa Martín Blázquez was emphatic: "He had four companies of which he was the sole director, four companies that today have no business or capital nor any assets, but he that debt had been generated," he clarified in TardeAR.