Global Times

Former Barca president Bartomeu arrested after club offices raided

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Former Barcelona president Josep Maria Bartomeu was arrested on Monday as part of a police investigat­ion into last year’s “Barcagate” scandal, a source with knowledge of the case told AFP.

Bartomeu, who resigned as president in October, was among four arrests made just six days ahead of the club’s new presidenti­al elections on Sunday.

Barcelona’s current Chief Executive Oscar Grau, head of legal services Roma Gomez Ponti and Bartomeu’s advisor Jaume Masferrer were also arrested by Catalan police, who searched the club’s offices on Monday morning.

Grau and Gomez Ponti were released late on Monday but Bartomeu and Masferrer would spend the night at a cell at a Barcelona police station before appearing before a judge on Tuesday, Spanish media reported.

Catalan police, the Mossos d’Esquadra, said in a statement the arrests were made as part of “an investigat­ion into alleged crimes related to property and the socio- economic order” that has “been going on for almost a year.”

Barcelona released a statement confirming the operation is linked to last year’s “Barcagate” controvers­y, when the club was accused of covering up payments made to a company called I3 Ventures, hired to boost the image of thenpresid­ent Bartomeu on social media.

Part of the social media campaign included criticizin­g current and former players, like Lionel Messi, Pep Guardiola and Xavi Hernandez. Messi described the controvers­y as “strange” in an interview with Catalan newspaper Mundo Deportivo.

Spanish radio station Cadena Ser claimed Barca paid I3 Ventures an inflated fee and put payments through in smaller, separate amounts to avoid the club’s financial controls.

Emili Rousaud, who resigned as Barcelona vice president in March last year, said in an interview with RAC1 at the time, “If the auditors tell us the cost of these services is 100,000 euros and we have paid 1 million, it means someone has had their hand in the till.” The club took legal action against him.

Rousaud was among six Barca executives to leave their posts, with a joint letter citing the scandal as a key issue needing to be resolved.

Bartomeu maintained the company had been hired only to monitor posts on social media and announced an internal audit by Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, which cleared the club of financial corruption in July.

“Let one thing be clear,” Bartomeu said. “To the question: Have we commission­ed the monitoring of social networks? The answer is yes.

“To the question: Have we commission­ed to discredit people or institutio­ns through social networks? The answer is no and we will take action against all those who accuse us of that.”

Yet Bartomeu resigned in October, avoiding a vote of no confidence triggered after more than 20,000 club members signed a petition against him.

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