Malta Independent

Former Juventus director appeals ban to European Court

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Nearly 14 years after Italy’s biggest soccer scandal, appeals are still ongoing.

Former Juventus director Antonio Giraudo, who was banned from the sport for life following a 2006 match-fixing scandal, submitted an appeal to the European Court of Human Rights on Monday.

According to Italian news agency LaPresse, Giraudo claims that by allowing sports federation­s to set up disciplina­ry courts, Italy violated an article of the Convention on Human Rights that grants access to a court establishe­d by law and a fair trial.

The appeal also states Giraudo’s lawyers were only given seven days to prepare his defence and that jurisdicti­on was handed to the same body – the Italian soccer federation – that had made the accusation­s.

At the heart of the scandal, known as Calciopoli, were accusation­s that Giraudo – and others – created a network of contacts with Italian football federation officials to influence refereeing assignment­s and arrange for key players on other teams to be booked ahead of matches with the Turin club.

Juventus was stripped of the 2005 and 2006 Serie A titles for its role in the scandal, and was relegated to the second division with a ninepoint penalty. The team immediatel­y won promotion back to Serie A.

Giraudo was initially sentenced to three years in prison but that was reduced on appeal and then eliminated in 2015 by Italy’s highest criminal court, which ruled that the statute of limitation­s expired.

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