I believe that, even though don’t be mistaken, I have no insider info, I only have access to first-hand news. It’s nobody’s secret that Juventus is always under investigation for something here in Italy. The overrepresentation of neapolitans in sport justice certainly doesn’t help. Investigations often so ridiculous that they hardly make the news internationally, such as a low-quality steel in the stadium and a clumsy attempt to tie Agnelli to organized crime, which was so embarrassing they had to pretend nothing happened.
Who knows, maybe with the whole Super League ordeal Ceferin made them feel so emboldened to actually go ahead with their half-assed accusations, and in true italian style they made a botched job out of it.
Ceferin certainly discussed with Gravina, they were together at the stadium during Inter-Porto which is absolutely out of place for a UEFA president. I think he discussed with Tebas as well, but in Spain they’re not so masochist to target their best teams. Barcelona is actually dirty, though, and this stuff with the referees coming up many years later might have something to do with it.
As far as your Corsport news goes, don’t worry, it’s absolute bogus. The “State Council” can’t invalidate the fact they have to give the paper in 7 days, and if they actually went there they would have no chance. Juventus was not supposed to appeal and they didn’t, Paratici and Cherubini did.
I’d tell everyone not to worry too much, even for the second investigation; Juventus is in the right side of this and Exor has a dream-team of lawyers working on it. Elkann cares, otherwise he wouldn’t have invested 700M in the last 3 years to recapitalize. Remember his last interview after the point deduction: “Juventus will never be the problem, but always part of the solution“. His words are cryptic, but the solution is the Super League, and this mess is probably a result of the fallout (even though of course FIGC could have acted alone).