inter under investigation? (23 Viewers)

C4ISR

Senior Member
Dec 18, 2005
2,362
I already said I don´t know nothing
....

I said that about Juve in Serie B, but NOOOO, there are some who think you are still innocent.
Innocent until proven guilty. Basic principle of law which courts around the world operate around. No1 is claiming Moggi is sprakling clean, but rather the things he was convcited of have no basis, and contradict what is written down in the official record. He didn't fix matches or bribe officals. He wasn't the mastermind behind a system where coincidentally everyone else involved was found innocent. He was the victim of a witch hunt and a far from impartial sporting justice, and taking a look at the facts clearly prove that.

Really sickens me some of u so called "Juventino" are bending over to proven non-sense. The evidence is starring us right in the face. Anyone who fails to acknowledge such basic understandings of the scandal are in fact the ones in denail. Not ppl like isha00, who merely report on relevant findings which cast all the propoganda on Juventus in a different light.
 

malducato1

Junior Member
Dec 26, 2005
456
Probably, but something strange has been happening in the last week.

It's not like that, before of this, no one dared to talk against Inter or against what happened this summer, but their words weren't given any relevance by the media. You could read these things mostly on agencies and, sometimes, on Tuttosport, Libero and Il Foglio.

Now, all of a sudden, after 6 months, Borrelli remembers that he sent the report about the Inter/Milan investigation to Palazzi in August, Palazzi suddenly finds it and we see the so called "deferimenti".
We have reached the top yesterday night, when Gazzetta, newspaper of the RCS group (that has Carlo Orazio Buora in its board, an Inter/Telecom man who put Verdelli -interista- as director of the newspaper), put an interview to Brunelli on its site, where the young keeper states that he was sold and bought numerous times by the 2 clubs (Inter and Milan), that *falsified his signature* in those contracts.
This is exceptionally unusual for gazzetta, that has always tried to hide any wrongdoing done by the milanese clubs..

Something has cracked, probably because Moratti&co. have been put in the "registro degli indagati" (I have no will to look for the translation of this :D) last week. Probably someone who didn't like the precedent situation, now is starting to lift his head, who knows..

I just hope it's not going to stop now.

It's the Avvocato, he doesn't like what binter did to his Juve and he is helping us from above.
 

AngelaL

Jinx Minx
Aug 25, 2006
10,215
so this would mean that we are gonna be in A and inter in B next season:D
Serie C2 would be more appropriate for inter. :D
....

Innocent until proven guilty. Basic principle of law which courts around the world operate around. No1 is claiming Moggi is sprakling clean, but rather the things he was convcited of have no basis, and contradict what is written down in the official record. He didn't fix matches or bribe officals. He wasn't the mastermind behind a system where coincidentally everyone else involved was found innocent. He was the victim of a witch hunt and a far from impartial sporting justice, and taking a look at the facts clearly prove that.

Really sickens me some of u so called "Juventino" are bending over to proven non-sense. The evidence is starring us right in the face. Anyone who fails to acknowledge such basic understandings of the scandal are in fact the ones in denail. Not ppl like isha00, who merely report on relevant findings which cast all the propoganda on Juventus in a different light.
:agree: :thumbs:

It's the Avvocato, he doesn't like what binter did to his Juve and he is helping us from above.
Forza Gianni!
 

Seven

In bocca al lupo, Fabio.
Jun 25, 2003
39,315
Wait a minute. Inter might have forged a contract and they risk a FINE? What kind of ridiculous action would that be?
 

C4ISR

Senior Member
Dec 18, 2005
2,362
Wait a minute. Inter might have forged a contract and they risk a FINE? What kind of ridiculous action would that be?
Here in North America, people go to prison for fudging their accounting records. Over the past few years, numerous CEO's, etc of various large corporations have been sent to prison. I imagine its no different in Italy. Same goes for forging passports.

Only explanation is Moratti. His money (power) is saving them from justice.
 
Apr 12, 2004
77,165
....


Innocent until proven guilty. Basic principle of law which courts around the world operate around. No1 is claiming Moggi is sprakling clean, but rather the things he was convcited of have no basis, and contradict what is written down in the official record. He didn't fix matches or bribe officals. He wasn't the mastermind behind a system where coincidentally everyone else involved was found innocent. He was the victim of a witch hunt and a far from impartial sporting justice, and taking a look at the facts clearly prove that.

Really sickens me some of u so called "Juventino" are bending over to proven non-sense. The evidence is starring us right in the face. Anyone who fails to acknowledge such basic understandings of the scandal are in fact the ones in denail. Not ppl like isha00, who merely report on relevant findings which cast all the propoganda on Juventus in a different light.


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Sorry, what was that?
 

Kaka1899

Senior Member
Jan 24, 2007
945
really Inter were not caught during Calciopolli did anything come of the Telecom Italia mobile scams? and now they will probably get away with this so is there anypoint??
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Inter Headed Down Boulevard Of Broken Dreams?


After so many years of Inter being the annual underachiever, the Nerazzurri have had plenty to smile about this season due to their on-field success. A new scandal, though, threatens to take it all away...

It seems that finally Inter have gotten it right and now they are showing the signs of a great squad, like a fine wine that needs years and years before maturing into the real thing.

Inter headed into Round 21 of Serie A 11 points clear of the second place side, proof that they are now seen as un vino vecchio. On the other hand, when there are three top teams in Italy one will always end up a bridesmaid. In addition, Mancini has finally got it right and he is using all of the resources in a meaningful manner. When I watch Inter play, I see a Juventus-like team, a team that is united and that wants to win. Their defense is solid and their attack is fluid.

For so many years the song “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” appeared to sum up Inter’s situation. The train never seemed to arrive on time (typical Italy). Inter lost and articles were written. Explanations for the problem? Players, management, coaching, and - most of all - president Massimo Moratti.

Moratti was a nice man who cared about Inter, but he thought with his heart not with his mind. At first Moratti seemed to be Inter’s savior, as he was ready to spend the cash required to bring in a winning squad, but it never happened.

Then the footballing gods sent a gift in the form of the Calciopoli scandal, and lo and behold the league’s two other perennial contenders, Juve and AC Milan, were caught with their hands in the biscotti jar. It seemed that Inter had been a victim of choice not of circumstance. The journalists then wrote: How many titles for Inter? In the end it was just one, as the blue and black were awarded their first Scudetto in 17 years. Still, all the years of failure by Moratti and his team went away. Finally, the Nerazzurri were the kings. As Tom Petty says, “It’s good to be king, if just for a while.”

Inter, though, have become a great team due to the fact AC Milan have fallen, not due to the points deduction but due to stale coaching and to an old team that has no drive to win. In addition, Milan patron Silvio Berlusconi does not want to invest as he once did and now the Rossoneri are looking for band-aids not for solutions. Ronaldo is not the answer, I believe. Also, the attitude simply is lacking: Pippo Inzaghi said, “The drive to score goals is not there anymore.” What do you expect to happen to Inter’s city rivals?

Also, many say if Juventus were in Serie A this year Inter would be second. I cannot say for that is a philosophical debate, just like the tree debate. If a tree falls does it make a sound? Technically it does, but does it matter? Some journalists deal with historical what ifs, but not me. All I can say is for the present Inter are kings, and they deserve the accolades. The Nerazzurri have broken the record for consecutive Serie A wins, and they appear perfect on all fronts, heading into Round 21 with not only the most points but also with the best offense (44 goals scored) and defense (17 goals surrendered).

As I mentioned a month ago in a previous article, however, everyone should be wary of a new scandal in Italy. It seems Inter (along with AC Milan) were involved in shady dealings and bad bookkeeping, inflating fees to make it look like Inter could afford them. So far, it appears, eight players switched sides between Inter and AC Milan but no transfer fees were recorded.

All the great progress of this current Inter campaign, therefore, could be elegantly wasted. Is it time to cue up “Boulevard of Broken Dreams” again?

The saying goes: innocent until proven guilty. If, though, Moratti and Inter indeed are guilty, what punishment should/could they get?

Perhaps they will have to attend Luciano Moggi’s lecture on morals…:rofl:

By Bruno Cardile
 

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
Good ol' Bruno, still incapable of hiding his Juve bias.

Ah, the fights we had online. :D
Which fights??

Do you mean in another forum??

btw, didn't the kids in that school refuse to attend Moggi's lecture, or something along those lines ?
No, kids didn't refuse to attend Moggi's lecture...

But other kids threatened to put the whole building on fire while he would be there...
 

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