The Herald (South Africa)

Tennis fixing probe: 15 arrests

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The Spanish Civil Guard has made widespread arrests following an investigat­ion into tennis match-fixing by an organised Armenian criminal gang, the European Union’s Europol agency said on Thursday.

Eleven house searches were carried out in Spain and ß167,000 (R2.6m) in cash were seized, along with a shotgun, more than 50 electronic devices, credit cards, five luxury vehicles and documentat­ion related to the case.

Forty-two bank accounts and balances have been frozen.

The Civil Guard said in a statement 15 people had been arrested, including the leaders of the criminal organisati­on, while a further 68 people have investigat­ed. Of the 83 people implicated in the case, 28 were profession­al tennis players, playing in the ITF Futures and Challenger categories, and one whose identity was not revealed competed in the 2018 US Open.

“Our officers have proved the group had been operating since February 2017 and estimate that they had earned millions of euros through the operation,” the statement said.

News of the arrests came a day after the Tennis Integrity Unit revealed that in 2018 more tennis players were discipline­d for violations of anticorrup­tion rules than in any other year since the body’s creation.

Twenty-one individual­s broke anti-corruption rules, with the majority sanctioned for match-fixing or betting offences, while eight lifetime bans were imposed for matchfixin­g and facilitati­ng betting.

The most notable person banned was Italian former world No 49 Daniele Bracciali. –

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