An Italian Soccer Federation (FIGC)
tribunal on Tuesday accepted a plea bargain between Juventus and
sporting prosecutors for the Turin club to pay a fine of
718,000-euro fine over a case regarding irregularities in an
agreement for salary cuts during the COVID-19 pandemic, sources
said on Tuesday.
The deal entails Juve agreeing not launch appeals in pending
cases, the sources said.
The Turin giants have been docked 10 Serie A points this season
in a separate case about financial irregularities regarding
allegedly inflated values assigned to some transfer dealings in
the club's balance sheets in recent years.
The wages case regards Juve's announcement at the start of the
pandemic that players had agree to take a big pay cuts for four
months to enable the club to make ends meet during the health
emergency.
The club, however, allegedly made secret payments to players,
who only gave up one month's salary.
The fine will be paid by the club and by several former Juve
executives implicated in the case.
The case of former Chairman Andrea Agnelli, however, has been
separated from the others and he will face a hearing on June 15,
the sources said.
Juve's share price on the Milan stock exchange climbed 7% to
0.31 euros after the news of the plea bargain came out.
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