Calciopoli or Morattopoli.. inter fake orgasm (37 Viewers)

Oggy

and the Cockroaches
Dec 27, 2005
7,511
Luka
Inter, at least when it comes to encounters with Milan and Juventus and perhaps even in entirety, have under Collina's refereeing lost more games then they have won! Yep, an Inter friendly referee if there ever was one...
You can bribe him, but you can't make him miracle worker.
 

.zero

★ ★ ★
Aug 8, 2006
82,813
I find your sexism very offensive.
I take offense to the offense you have taken

serie a is weak right now and it will be weaker if it punishes Inter...
nothing will happen to inter , unfortunately ;(
This is true

Italian football is more than hurting right now and it would be futile to compound it with more self inflicted wounds by punishing Inter
 

SoulSiick

Schizoid Man
Oct 16, 2007
515
AP article about today court : Moggi goes on offensive in Italian scandal

NAPLES, Italy (AP)—The four-year-old Italian match-fixing scandal could flare up again because of maneuvers by former Juventus executive Luciano Moggi in his criminal trial.

Italian media widely reported on Tuesday that defense lawyers for Moggi requested that 75 additional phone-tap conversations be admitted as evidence in the trial, and prosecutors did not oppose the move.

The additional phone-tap conversations—printed in Italian media over the last week—allegedly link Inter Milan and other clubs to the scandal.

“And it’s not over now,” Moggi said, pulling out phone-tap transcripts from a folder as he addressed the media after the court session, the ANSA news agency reported. “In the next hearings we will bring out other new conversations that involve Inter and AC Milan.”

Inter was awarded the 2006 Serie A title after Juventus was stripped of the honor and relegated to Serie B due to its involvement in the scandal.

Former AC Milan coach and current Chelsea manager Carlo Ancelotti is scheduled to take the stand in the next hearing on April 20.

Italian football federation officials are awaiting developments in the Naples case as they consider opening a new investigation into the scandal.

The overall theme of Moggi’s defense is that all the teams were in contact with refereeing officials.

In the purported conversations—printed in the Gazzetta dello Sport, as well as other papers—Inter president Massimo Moratti is heard talking with referee selector Paolo Bergamo about the match officials for an Italian Cup game that Inter went on to win 3-1 over Bologna in January 2005.

Moratti has rejected the new allegations as “ridiculous and shameful,” while Bergamo maintains that he “always spoke regularly with all the club presidents.”

Moratti has also signaled he would be willing to take the stand in the Naples trial.

Another former Juventus executive, Antonio Giraudo, already has received a three-year sentence from the Naples court on charges of criminal association aimed at committing sports fraud.

Moggi and Giraudo were banned from football for five years by a sports court for influencing the outcome of matches. They deny wrongdoing.

Juventus was stripped of its 2005 and ’06 Serie A titles and relegated to the second division with a nine-point penalty. It immediately won promotion back to Serie A.

The scandal was the biggest corruption case in the history of Italian football. Besides Juventus, three other big clubs—AC Milan, Lazio and Fiorentina—were penalized, as were Reggina and Arezzo.

AFP : Prosecutor to call Ancelotti in corruption case

ROME (AFP) - The public prosecutor in Naples on Tuesday postponed proceedings in the match-fixing case against former Juventus supremo Luciano Moggi for a week when Chelsea coach Carlo Ancelotti should be called as a witness, the Ansa news agency reported.

Moggi, who has already been convicted by the sporting justice in Italy for match-fixing, is being tried in a criminal court for sporting fraud relating to the 2006 Calciopoli scandal.

He was previously convicted on the evidence of numerous telephone conversations that were tapped by investigators in which he is heard discussing referees with the refereeing commission.

But his lawyers on Tuesday requested that 75 more conversations dating back to 2006 and before also be transcribed, leading to the postponement of proceedings until April 20.

Ancelotti was the AC Milan coach at the time of the scandal but despite being called as a witness there is a big chance he will not show, especially as his current team is involved in the English Premier League title race.
 
Apr 29, 2006
3,158
Guys it seems we are making enormous progress.
If the brainwashed Luka, a seemingly famous for his insanity mod in forza inter forums, which contributes the 1st sentence to "hundreds of pages from trials, do you want him to translate them for you?" and call the people in THIS thread insane, believing in 'conspiracies', and lunatics in general just said:

"You don't need the site, as there is no more "doubt" over there. They already changed the content.
What you can do, is show what Tuttosport have written today in their live report from Calciopoli, or any site that reported it (even Gazzetta), because they reported what the lawyers said, and they said that Facchetti is asking for Collina.
Then show them youtube clip, and ask them, where Facchetti is saying the word Collina."
Talking about conspiracy theories???
 

C4ISR

Senior Member
Dec 18, 2005
2,362
...
So, if someone here thinks that Inter will be punished, then have in mind that it's surely not what Moggi is aiming at.
In my opinion, I don’t think it matters whether Moggi is aiming for a “everyone is innocent” or “everyone is guilty” outcome, as given what has been uncovered so far, the implications from either stance are obvious.

If speaking to ref administrators was a common occurrence and Moggi did not have an exclusive relationship (which is obviously the case), it shows Moggi/Juventus were wrongly punished, and therefore they both have a very strong case for seeking damages (returned titles and/or compensation).

If everyone is guilty, it shows Juventus were unfairly targeted, and because other teams benefited from this environment of unequally applied justice, Juventus still have a strong case for damages.

Regardless, either way it proves Moggi was not the mastermind of calcio.

...
And I am sure that if the "all innocent" comes up, Juve will get their Scudetti back but they will not be financially compensated.
Who will pay the damages? That is why Juve will not receive any money.
 

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