​Spain's Princess Cristina testifies in embezzlement case PALMA DE MALLORCA, Spain -- Spain's Princess Cristina testified Thursday at her tax fraud trialthat her husband handled all bill payments for the couple and she didn't know why some costs for their lavish lifestyle were paid for with a credit card for a company they co-owned. Cristina spent 20 minutes answering questions from her lawyer after declining to take questions from an attorney with the anti-corruption group that leveled tax fraud charges against her. The princess testified she never asked her husband Inaki Urdangarin about the business dealings of the Aizoon company he ran from an office in the Barcelona mansion that they lived in for years with their four children but were forced to sell as their legal troubles mounted. Asked by her lawyer why she never talked with her husband about what the company did, Cristina responded that "they weren't issues that interested me. At that time my children were very small and we were very busy." "He was in charge of the family expenses. I didn't get involved in that," she added.
In this April 5, 2013 file photo, Spain's Princess Cristina is photographed as she walks toward her office in Barcelona, Spain. The 50-year-old princess and her husband are set to face anti-monarchy protesters and hordes of media Monday, Jan. 11, 2016 as they enter a makeshift courtroom and she makes history in front of millions of Spanish TV viewers as the first royal family member to face criminal charges since the monarchy was restored in 1975. AP Photo/Manu Fernandez The case centers on accusations that Urdangarin used his former title of Duke of Palma to embezzle about 6 million euros ($6.6 million) in public funds for the nonprofit Noos Institute he ran with a