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Berlusconi: Tax fraud hearing a 'waste of time'.

Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi made a rare appearance in open court Monday but left after about 2 1/2 hours, saying the hearing at his tax fraud trial was a waste of time and accusing prosecutors of having no case against him.


In court, Berlusconi sat in the front row next to his lawyer, Niccolo Ghedini, while three witnesses provided testimony on the purchase of television rights for Italian TV.

While he did not address the court, Berlusconi made off-the-cuff remarks to reporters before the hearing and during a break, and stopped outside to thank dozens of supporters and political allies who were cheering beneath half a dozen huge blue balloons reading "Silvio resist."

"I've spent a surreal morning, a paradoxical waste of time and a waste of resources," Berlusconi told reporters inside before leaving. "There is no proof, no documents, no testimony, no money trail that supports the prosecutors' thesis."

He said magistrates, who he has long contended are politically driven and want to oust him from power, "do not work for the country but against the country."

The Italian leader has declared that he will appear in the Milan tribunal as frequently as duties allow to contest four active court cases against him.

He smiled and shook hands with lawyers as he entered the courtroom. Speaking to reporters before the hearing, he was in combative mood.

"These charges are laughable, unfounded and demented," he said. He called the charges "the invention of the public prosecutor."

Prosecutors say Berlusconi's Mediaset media empire purchased TV rights for U.S. movies through two offshore companies and falsely declared the costs to reduce its tax bill. Along with Berlusconi, 10 others are charged in the case, including Mediaset Chairman Fedele Confalonieri and movie producer Frank Agrama.

The hearing was scheduled to continue in the afternoon, but without Berlusconi.

He attended a closed-door preliminary hearing on March 28 in another alleged tax fraud case also involving the purchase of TV rights to broadcast American films on his private network, relating to a more recent time frame than the Mediaset case. But he had last showed up in open court for a trial eight years ago.

The premier has been tried many times, mostly in relation to his business dealings. He has always either been acquitted or seen the statute of limitations expire.

Last week he skipped the opening of his separate trial in Milan for allegedly paying for sex with an underage prostitute and using his influence to cover it up. He has denied wrongdoing, saying politically-driven magistrates want to oust him from power. On Monday he called the charges in that case "totally without foundation."

Berlusconi dismissed the possibility of a conviction in any of the four cases he's facing, saying: "Not in your wildest dreams!"
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