Business Day (Nigeria)

Spain arrest fifteen over match-fixing scandal

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The law enforcemen­t officials in Spain have arrested 15 people in an investigat­ion into tennis match fixing by an Armenian criminal gang.

Spain’s Civil Guard said 83 people were implicated, among them 28 players from the ITF Futures and Challenger tours.

One of those arrested is Spanish tennis player Marc Fornell-mestres, 36.

He was ranked 1007th in singles at the end of 2018 and was suspended by the Tennis Integrity Unit last month as part of an anticorrup­tion probe.

Spain Civil Guard also said one of the players implicated in the investigat­ion competed at last year’s US Open.

EU police agency Europol said 11 house searches had been carried out in Spain in which 167,000 euros (£151,000) in cash were seized, along with a shotgun.

It added that more than 50 electronic devices, credit cards, five luxury vehicles and documentat­ion related to the case were also seized.

Forty-two bank accounts have also been frozen.

Europol earlier said on Thursday that 83 people had been arrested by the Civil Guard, but the Spanish authoritie­s later clarified the situation.

“The suspects bribed profession­al players to guarantee predetermi­ned results and used the identities of thousands of citizens to bet on the pre-arranged games,” Europol said in a statement.

“A criminal group of Armenian individual­s used a profession­al tennis player, who acted as the link between the gang and the rest of the criminal group.

The Civil Guard added that “once they got the bribe, the Armenian members went to the places where the matches were being played to make sure the player went through with what they had agreed, making the most of their imposing size”.

“Fifteen people have been detained, among them the leaders of the organisati­on, and 68 others have been investigat­ed.”

None of those investigat­ed has been named.

The Civil Guard said the organisati­on had been operating since at least February 2017, while Europol said at least 97 ITF Futures and Challenger matches had been fixed.

The investigat­ion started in 2017 after the Tennis Integrity Unit (TIU) grew concerned about “irregular activities” relating to pre- arranged matches in the tournament­s, Europol added.

Last month a final report into corruption in tennis by the Independen­t Review Panel said there should be no live streaming, or scoring data provided, at the lowest tier of profession­al tennis.

The ITF Futures and Challenger tournament­s are below the top- tier ATP and WTA Tours.

The Internatio­nal Tennis Federation estimates there are 14,000 players trying to make a living from the sport, half of whom do not make any money at all.

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