Calciopoli or Morattopoli.. inter fake orgasm (12 Viewers)

Juventino_NJ

Senior Member
Sep 16, 2006
533
FIGC officially re-opens Calciopoli

Wednesday 21 April, 2010

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The Italian Football Federation has officially re-opened the Calciopoli inquest after new evidence emerged during Luciano Moggi’s trial.

“With regards to the trial in Naples, the FIGC’s disciplinary body will ask from now to view all the evidence provided by both parties,” read a statement on the Federation website.

“Over the next few days the prosecutor Stefano Palazzi will formally send a request to the President of the Naples tribunal, Teresa Casoria, beginning the inquest regarding the new series of wiretapped phone calls.”

The matter was dealt with in 2006 through the sporting justice system, resulting in Juventus losing two titles and earning a demotion to Serie B, while other clubs were docked points.

Former Juve director general Moggi is now at the centre of a civil trial in Naples and has introduced wiretaps featuring other club representatives, above all Inter, as evidence.

Effectively this begins a new sporting justice system inquest into Calciopoli that includes the phone calls not originally submitted as evidence – or even transcribed by police – in 2006.

Juventus could now officially call for Inter to be stripped of the contentious 2005-06 Scudetto, which was taken from the Bianconeri and handed to the third-placed team. It would instead not be assigned at all, like the 2004-05 title.

Moggi’s defence lawyers hope to suggest that he was not at the centre of a 'mafia’ style organisation putting pressure on referees.

Instead, they maintain he was only one of many club officials who contacted the refereeing designators in this way.

“Either everyone here is guilty or everyone is innocent. I think everyone is innocent,” said Moggi.
 

ZAF3000

Senior Member
Feb 14, 2005
5,348
So bottomline do we get a compensation or not
If everyone is said to be innocent (unlikely) we, alongside Milan and others involved in 2006, should be compensated back and given back whats ours (2 scudetti and loads of money). BUT most probably that won't happen. What they will do is say everyone is guilty. Strip inter from 05-06 scudetto and not assign it to anyone. Then it all depends on how they want to play it, either start punishing the teams heavily (justice) or give them a slap on the hand (injustice). But honestly the way the trial in 2006 went through, the latter is the most probable scenario. Milan were the only team found to be guilty of match fixing yet they barely got a slap on the hand. Us on the other hand got demoted with initial 30 points deduction.
 

Orgut

Senior Member
Dec 31, 2002
19,348
If everyone is said to be innocent (unlikely) we, alongside Milan and others involved in 2006, should be compensated back and given back whats ours (2 scudetti and loads of money). BUT most probably that won't happen. What they will do is say everyone is guilty. Strip inter from 05-06 scudetto and not assign it to anyone. Then it all depends on how they want to play it, either start punishing the teams heavily (justice) or give them a slap on the hand (injustice). But honestly the way the trial in 2006 went through, the latter is the most probable scenario. Milan were the only team found to be guilty of match fixing yet they barely got a slap on the hand. Us on the other hand got demoted with initial 30 points deduction.
I hope the 1st scenario occur as we need the money to rebuild and its the only thing that can help us to get forward
the 2nd scenario won`t take us forward therefore doesn`t mean too much but if it is selected then at least make justice demote Inter and deduct points from others
BUT as you said I guess the injustice thing will take place and Inter and other teams get a 4 points deduction or something like that
 

SoulSiick

Schizoid Man
Oct 16, 2007
515
Reuters :


Italy federation to examine new match-fixing phone taps

By Mark Meadows

MILAN, April 21 (Reuters) - The Italian soccer federation opened an investigation on Wednesday following new phone tap evidence introduced at a criminal trial in Naples linked to a 2006 match-fixing scandal.

The development will cause flutters in the hearts of Inter Milan fans, whose club could be dragged into the probe just a day after their thrilling 3-1 win over Barcelona in their Champions League semi-final, first leg.

Juventus were demoted in the 2006 scandal, which revolved around clubs procuring favourable referees for matches, and their former general manager Luciano Moggi is now facing a criminal trial in Naples over the affair.

Moggi’s lawyers have produced phone tap evidence which they say shows Inter and other clubs not previously linked to the scandal were also involved in trying to choose specific referees. Criminal prosecutors and Inter deny this.

However, the soccer federation’s own investigation unit said in a statement it was launching another sporting probe into the affair in light of the new evidence from Naples.

“(The unit) will ask to acquire all the material produced in court,” the statement said.

Inter were handed the 2006 Serie A title by a sporting court after original champions Juve were stripped of the scudetto.

Juve fans now say Inter should lose that honour if it is proved they were involved in the scandal, something the federation will now investigate.

(Reporting by Mark Meadows; Editing by Ken Ferris)

AFP:

Italian Federation opens new Calciopoli investigation


ROME (AFP) - The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) on Wednesday announced that it is opening a new match-fixing investigation.

The new inquest, to be led by FIGC prosecutor Stefano Palazzi, is related to the 2006 Calciopoli scandal that almost brought Italian football to its knees and follows a series of revelations in recent weeks.

Lawyers for Luciano Moggi, who is currently in the dock of a criminal court in Naples over his involvement in the 2006 scandal, have been drip-releasing tapped conversations between the former referees' selector and various club officials, dating back to 2005-06.

Many of those have been between the now-deceased former Inter Milan president Giacinto Facchetti and Paolo Bergamo, the former referees' selector.

Moggi, the former Juventus president, was himself previously convicted in a sporting court for match-fixing relating to conversations he had with officials over the designation of certain referees for particular matches.

Juventus were hit hard by Calciopoli as they were stripped of their last two Serie A titles in 2005 and 2006 and relegated to Serie B.

Inter, however, were the only one of Italy's big three clubs—the other being AC Milan—not to be punished.

During the original investigation, thousands of telephone conversations were tapped and their contents transcribed, and this was used as evidence against the clubs sanctioned, which also included Fiorentina, Lazio and Reggina.

Some conversations, considered irrelevant by the investigators, were not originally transcribed but Moggi's lawyers successfully applied to have them noted and used as evidence.

It is these new transcriptions that the current investigation will concentrate on although those so far leaked to the press by Moggi's lawyers have contained nothing damning.
 
Mar 28, 2007
2,272
21 aprile 2010
Intercettazioni, la FIGC chiede gli atti al Tribunale di Napoli

In riferimento al nuovo filone di intercettazioni emerse nel processo in corso di svolgimento a Napoli, la procura della FIGC ha aperto un’indagine. Come annunciato in una nota, la Federcalcio chiederà al Tribunale del capoluogo campano di acquisire tutto il materiale probatorio prodotto dalle parti.

La decisione è stata presa dal capo della procura federale Stefano Palazzi, nel corso di una riunione con i suoi collaboratori.

Juventus.com
 
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gsol

gsol

Senior Member
Oct 14, 2007
1,448
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    They said it was totally legit because that call got pulled from the investigation (I wonder why). In the transcript Meani basically promissed an easy game (it didn't matter to Milan anymore) and in turn was promissed a "good deal" on Jankulovski. Amazing how Udinese didn't even get implicated.

    By the way, the Brit papers need to be brought up to date. All they say is how Juventus were relegated for match fixing. Fuck it's been 4 years, pull your heads out of your asses.
     
    OP
    gsol

    gsol

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    Oct 14, 2007
    1,448
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8,219
    I doubt that the FIGC will admit to having wrongfully relegated Juve. My fingers are crossed but I think they will play it safe and just try to pacify everyone by punishing Inter a bit (i.e. stripping them of OUR title and some fine) and that will be that. If they do what's right they will leave themselves open to way too many lawsuits.

    I suppose they could plead ignorance though and blame Auricchio for not handing over all the evidence.
     

    Red

    -------
    Moderator
    Nov 26, 2006
    47,024
    By the way, the Brit papers need to be brought up to date. All they say is how Juventus were relegated for match fixing. Fuck it's been 4 years, pull your heads out of your asses.
    Some are better than others.

    I noticed the BBC is still on about match fixing, but The Times had a pretty decent analysis of what was going on a couple of weeks ago.

    It doesn't really matter, since most Brits assume all matches involving Italian teams are fixed (unless they lose to an English team).
     

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