Calciopoli or Morattopoli.. inter fake orgasm (65 Viewers)

adamcand

New Member
Apr 2, 2010
3
http://www.corriere.it/notizie-ulti...-non-colpevoli/02-04-2010/1-A_000094522.shtml

Calciopoli, gli inquirenti 'scagionano' l'Inter: "Vittime, non colpevoli"

02 Aprile 2010 21:07 SPORT

NAPOLI - Gli inquirenti della Procura di Napoli, che hanno istruito il processo su Calciopoli, intervengono dopo la pubblicazione di intercettazioni telefoniche tra l'ex designatore arbitrale Paolo Bergamo e il presidente dell'Inter Massimo Moratti: "Il significato attribuito alle telefonate non trascritte , tra le 171mila intercettate nel corso dell'indagine di Calciopoli, rappresenta 'un'opera di disinformazione allo stato puro" fanno sapere dalla Procura. "Il reato - dicono fonti interne - non e' parlare al telefono, ma e' reato quando si stipulano accordi illeciti. Le vittime non possono essere trasformate in autori del reato". (RCD)
 

Paid-off-Ref

Senior Member
Dec 16, 2004
4,102
Are people taking this seriously? Have legal experts commented on this new information? English websites haven't commented much on it. I see nothing on Football Italia regarding the Moratti/Bergamo conversation. What are the chances of Inter actually getting punished? Is it too much to hope for that something will be done?
 

solojuve1897

Mille Grazie Pavel
Sep 17, 2008
391
http://www.corriere.it/notizie-ulti...-non-colpevoli/02-04-2010/1-A_000094522.shtml

Calciopoli, gli inquirenti 'scagionano' l'Inter: "Vittime, non colpevoli"

02 Aprile 2010 21:07 SPORT

NAPOLI - Gli inquirenti della Procura di Napoli, che hanno istruito il processo su Calciopoli, intervengono dopo la pubblicazione di intercettazioni telefoniche tra l'ex designatore arbitrale Paolo Bergamo e il presidente dell'Inter Massimo Moratti: "Il significato attribuito alle telefonate non trascritte , tra le 171mila intercettate nel corso dell'indagine di Calciopoli, rappresenta 'un'opera di disinformazione allo stato puro" fanno sapere dalla Procura. "Il reato - dicono fonti interne - non e' parlare al telefono, ma e' reato quando si stipulano accordi illeciti. Le vittime non possono essere trasformate in autori del reato". (RCD)

Hehe, Inter "The Victims"...
 

Max

Senior Member
Jul 15, 2003
4,828
Until I see a page dedicated to it in the Hamilton Spectator Sports section, I won't consider any of this effective. This will all be swept under the rug, just like someone said previously. I want Inter's name slandered too, but I doubt it'll happen.
 

C4ISR

Senior Member
Dec 18, 2005
2,362
These “revelations” give me no hope. They do nothing but infuriate me. All this was known years ago. We already knew (courtesy of the verdicts) that no match fixing existed, that the ref selections were legit, and that Moggi was not a mastermind of calcio manipulation. All this was known before this Naples trial, but no1, Juventus management included, bothered to pursue it because they didn’t have the stomach for it.

The climate for the truth did not exist back then, and it certainly does not exist now. Proof is in the lack of media attention compared to 2006. During that summer, nothing but slander and lies were printed about Juventus. Now we have real courts (not sporting courts with club directors at the helm) making key findings, and the Italian media has hardly made a peep.

Nothing has changed since 2006, and I am certain the FIGC cannot stomach more bad press for a league that is already visibly dwindling away. They will not shoot themselves in the foot again.

Forget about justice people. The law is a whole different ball game in Italy as proven by the numerous injustices, inconsistencies, and flat out criminal conduct that has scarred every aspect of calciopoli.
 

Dostoevsky

Tzu
Administrator
May 27, 2007
88,998
Are people taking this seriously? Have legal experts commented on this new information? English websites haven't commented much on it. I see nothing on Football Italia regarding the Moratti/Bergamo conversation. What are the chances of Inter actually getting punished? Is it too much to hope for that something will be done?
It will be discussed in court and there's much going on apparently. English websites are always late with it.
 

JuveJay

Senior Signor
Moderator
Mar 6, 2007
74,947
It will be discussed in court and there's much going on apparently. English websites are always late with it.
Plus English websites are only quick on news for Italian football if it is negative, it's something of a national passtime, so news that Moggi was not actually guilty of an extraordinary offense after all isn't so enticing to them.
 

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