"Jail sentence for German referee" (1 Viewer)

Zé Tahir

JhoolayLaaaal!
Moderator
Dec 10, 2004
29,281
#1
Referee Robert Hoyzer has been sentenced to two years and five months in prison for his part in Germany's biggest match-fixing scandal.
The 26-year-old admitted fixing or trying to fix nine matches.


The prosecution recommended that Hoyzer be given a suspended sentence, but judge Gerti Kramer opted for a custodial term.

"It wasn't a youthful misdemeanour but a serious crime," said Kramer. "He violated his duty of neutrality."

Hoyzer appeared shocked by the verdict and left the court in Berlin without speaking to waiting reporters.

He said in Tuesday's final arguments: "I'm very sorry about all the all people I lied to and cheated. I've damaged German soccer greatly."

He will remain free until his appeal is heard.

"We and Mr Hoyzer are very disappointed by the verdict. Even the prosecutors had sought a suspended sentence," said Hoyzer's lawyer Thomas Hermes.

Dominik Marks, another referee, denied involvement in the outcomes of four games but received a suspended sentence of one and a half years.

Ante Sapina, the Croatian who orchestrated the match-fixing for a betting ring, was jailed for two years and 11 months.

Sapina's brothers Filip, 38, and bar-owner Milan, 40, were both given suspended sentences for aiding Ante's criminal operation.

Suspicions were raised when lowly Paderborn came from 2-0 down to beat former European Cup winners SV Hamburg 4-2 last year in the German Cup.

There were two debatable penalties and a mystery sending-off in the match.

According to the indictment, Ante Sapina made more than £500,000 from Paderborn's victory.

Referee Hoyzer later admitted taking £46,000 and a flat-screen television in return for influencing the match.

Marks was accused of amassing £25,000 for his involvement in four games.

German football association president Theo Zwanziger said he was happy with the rulings 10 months after allegations first surfaced.

"The threat of two and a half years in prison will certainly make one or two people think before trying to influence a football match," he said.

The fraud trial has caused major embarrassment to Germany's football establishment just eight months before the country stages the 2006 World Cup.

It is not over because ex-professional Steffen Karl, formerly of first division Borussia Dortmund and a Uefa Cup finalist, is still being tried separately in connection with the match-rigging scam.

The case of Karl, who denies ever under-performing or seeking to lose a game, continues.

In all, 23 games were listed by prosecutor Thorsten Cloidt as suspicious.

Most were lower league games and all but two were between German sides.

The exceptions were a friendly between Hansa Rostock and Middlesbrough, and a Turkish first division match between Galatasaray and Ankaragucu in April 2004.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/europe/4445896.stm


Good verditc, imo, set's a great example.
 

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Chxta

Onye kwe, Chi ya ekwe
Nov 1, 2004
12,088
#5
Saw this one in Today's Fiver :rofl:

Granny Fiver always used to say: "Crime doesn't pay". As Granny had a
battering ram in one hand and enough diamonds to pebbledash the new
Wembley in the other, the Fiver resolved merely to never get caught.
Were we to attempt to fix a match, for instance, we'd go small, for
fear of ending up as a prison pet to 19 stones of sweat and hair. We
certainly wouldn't try to see Southend past Arsenal in the FA Cup.

Which is basically what German referee Robert Hoyzer did last August,
when he conjured two penalties and a dodgy sending-off as
Regionalliga Nord minnows SC Paderborn beat Bundesliga side Hamburg
SV 4-2. Unsurprisingly, Herr Hoyzer has since been binned by the
German FA and was today sentenced to two-and-a-half years behind bars
after pleading guilty to fraud. Fellow crooked ref Dominik Marks was
given a suspended sente

Behind it all was Croatian cafe owner Ante Sapina, who put GBP45k in
Hoyzer's pocket for fixing, or trying to fix, nine matches between
April and December last year. Sapina trousered more than 2m euros
himself betting on the 23 games he tried to manipulate with brothers
Filip and Milan - bagging half a million euros (and alerting the
authorities) on the Paderborn v Hamburg match alone.

A master of subtlety, Ante Sapina would text Hoyzer bribes during
half-time or meet players in restaurants before kick-off, brown
envelope under arm, with requests to "play with their brakes on". He
got just under three years today, with suspended sentences for his
two brothers. Both Sapina and Hoyzer have indicated they intend to
appeal their sentences, but the Fiver thinks they fully deserve a
spell as the wing plaything, if only for being so stupid.
 

swag

L'autista
Administrator
Sep 23, 2003
83,482
#7
++ [ originally posted by ßömßärdiër ] ++
This douche cock deserves it all. Even the ass rapage.
I've accidentally seen German porn. :scared: That boy is going to have a hell of a time in the Big House. Especially when he tells him he's in for "match fixing as a ref". :skull:
 
OP
Zé Tahir

Zé Tahir

JhoolayLaaaal!
Moderator
Dec 10, 2004
29,281
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #8
    I'm disturbed why the journalist decided to write "soccer" instead of "football". I can't get past that
     

    Snoop

    Sabet is a nasty virgin
    Oct 2, 2001
    28,186
    #10
    why would someone feel sorry for him?he stole money,now sentenced for two and half year?sounds very fair for me.
     

    Bjerknes

    "Top Economist"
    Mar 16, 2004
    111,601
    #12
    ++ [ originally posted by Zé Tahir ] ++
    I'm disturbed why the journalist decided to write "soccer" instead of "football". I can't get past that
    Oh puhleeze. :rolleyes:

    Perhaps I should make a fuss next time somebody writes "Juve" instead of "Juventus"..
     
    OP
    Zé Tahir

    Zé Tahir

    JhoolayLaaaal!
    Moderator
    Dec 10, 2004
    29,281
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #13
    ++ [ originally posted by RochemBeck ] ++


    Oh puhleeze. :rolleyes:

    Perhaps I should make a fuss next time somebody writes "Juve" instead of "Juventus"..
    Man he's British, it's embarassing. Besides, Juve is just a short/nick of Juventus, so that's different.
     

    JCK

    Biased
    JCK
    May 11, 2004
    123,561
    #14
    ++ [ originally posted by swag ] ++


    I've accidentally seen German porn. :scared: That boy is going to have a hell of a time in the Big House. Especially when he tells him he's in for "match fixing as a ref". :skull:

    I wonder what will happen if he meets a fan of one of the clubs that he fixed their matches while he's in there.
     

    JCK

    Biased
    JCK
    May 11, 2004
    123,561
    #15
    ++ [ originally posted by RochemBeck ] ++


    Oh puhleeze. :rolleyes:

    Perhaps I should make a fuss next time somebody writes "Juve" instead of "Juventus"..
    That's not a good analogy Andy, and you know it. It still is better than Seven infamous analogy.
     

    Bjerknes

    "Top Economist"
    Mar 16, 2004
    111,601
    #16
    ++ [ originally posted by Jeeks ] ++


    That's not a good analogy Andy, and you know it. It still is better than Seven infamous analogy.
    That's a perfect analogy, Jeeks. Juve and Juventus are exactly the same thing.

    And I find quarrels over the usage of soccer/football to be pathetic to say the least.
     
    OP
    Zé Tahir

    Zé Tahir

    JhoolayLaaaal!
    Moderator
    Dec 10, 2004
    29,281
  • Thread Starter
  • Thread Starter #18
    ++ [ originally posted by RochemBeck ] ++


    Which gives him even more the right to use it, considering the British coined the term soccer.
    The British coined the entire english language. That is no reason.
     

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