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Soccer,court cancels Moggi jail term in 'Calciopoli'-update2

Sentence against Giraudo also timed out in match-fix scandal

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Rome, March 24 - Italy's highest appeals court has cancelled a prison sentence against ex-Juventus executive Luciano Moggi in a notorious match-fixing case known as 'Xalciopoli' because it timed out, the Cassation Court ruled early Tuesday.
    The court said the sentence against former Juventus chief executive Antonio Giraudo also timed out.
    Further, the high court upheld an earlier court decision to acquit referees Paolo Bertini and Antonio Dattilo on the charges that date from 2006.
    Moggi expressed relief at the high-court ruling.
    "This is an unpleasant thing, because this process is abnormal and has resolved nothing, it only created so many expenses," said Moggi.
    Four defendants in the Calciopoli case were originally sentenced in December 2009 on charges of criminal association aimed at committing sports fraud.
    The original trial judge condemned "the existence of a conspiracy to affect the outcome of soccer championships".
    The case centered on allegations that Moggi and Giraudo worked with Italian football federation officials to influence refereeing assignments in order to have compliant refs officiate at some of the Juventus games.
    Moggi was originally sentenced to five years and four months and both Giraudo and Moggi were banned from football for life.
    Seven other defendants - three ex-refs, one ref still officiating at the time of the trials, and three former linesmen - were ultimately acquitted in the scandal.
    Many Italian teams were implicated in the scandal, but champions Juventus were worst hit.
    The Turin giants were stripped of two Serie A titles and demoted to the second tier as a result of the scandal, where they stayed a season before winning promotion back to the top flight.
    Moggi was banned from sport for five years and, when the suspension ran out, the Italian Soccer Federation (FIGC) extended it to the rest of his life.
    That ruling was upheld by the Italian Olympic Committee (CONI), Italian sport's governing body, and by the Lazio regional administrative court.
   

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