http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2009/no ... appeal-banCiro Pabón wrote:What did the documents say?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2009/no ... appeal-banCiro Pabón wrote:What did the documents say?
You can take that to the bank, so trueChaparral wrote: Hey settle down and think once in a while will you.
I'll save those of you having read my extensive posts on the court case thread, as the above is a pretty good summary of fact.Chaparral wrote: This adjudication wasnt in a court of law - it was some council deciding that someone had transgressed the 'law' in their own self defined (star chamber) court (give me a break the FIA under Mosely's stewardship was the most corrupt of all) - they adjudged that Briatore had either sanctioned or ordered PK Jr to crash for the benefit of the team - PK admitted he did it but they NEVER proved Briatore either sanctioned or ordered the fix - thats a fact - and to be honest I dont care a whole lot about Briatore but I dont like Kangaroo courts either which is what happened to Briatore
As Bernie said... "never count Flavio out" (sorry if I'm misquoting)SZ wrote:Sure xpensive... but it's far from over at any rate too... plenty of entertainment out of this Max-Flav battle for at least a decade yet
You've essentially come up with a mind-boggling number of ways in which to express the same, very rigid opinion. Ever considered the trial might focus more on the Briatore/FIA/ban side of things than having anything to do with anyone else?WhiteBlue wrote:In a way I'm not too displeased that this goes in front of a regular court. The predicted outcome should be:The verdict is really a matter of discretion and so the punishment should vary at every instance that deals with the case. Judges have different values and that influences the penalty. The WMSC under MM obviously did not like to be lied at. The civil judge may have different standards.
- Briatore is still found responsible for allowing the plan to go forward
- Symmonds still responsible for detailed planning
- FIA found right to have jurisdiction on the matter
- Piquet's amnesty confirmed
- Briatore and Symmonds still punished but perhaps with a slightly smaller verdict.
In any case the "kangaroo court" nonsense should be dismissed by a regular court and another f1 myths will be eradicated.
It must be a great comfort for you to be so well shielded from being called out for your bullshit.WhiteBlue wrote:I'm not making comments about other users here and I expect all other users to stick to the posting guide lines as well. Have your say on the issue and be done.
This is something I've mentioned previously.. I doubt an outside court can rule on anything other than perhaps to 'undo' the verdict (European Union regulations might enable this - I'm not sure). There is no way they could impose a new ruling*, rather they just send the parties involved back to their own sporting body for a new hearing - with recommendations of course. Failing that I think the French appeal court (or equivalent of) is possibly the final stop for all FIA-related disputes.WhiteBlue wrote:In any case the "kangaroo court" nonsense should be dismissed by a regular court and another f1 myths will be eradicated.
There is also the human rights issue that is usually watched by the EU. Life ban on professional activities could be something that could be seen as a conflict with other values that need to be upheld. So the question of the appropriateness of the punishment could play a role.Rob W wrote:The European Union courts of course can always rule where they see anti-competitive behaviour happening etc, but I'm not sure a dispute over sporting cheating and the punishment dished out is really their concern...
The difference is that doping just endangers the offender and disadvantages the honest participants. The deliberate crashing of a racing car can have tragical consequences not only for the participating drivers but also for the marshals and spectators. It is not so long ago that young Surtees was killed by a flying wheel and that a marshal was killed by a wheel in Australia. Because of the safety concerns one cannot compare this with doping. The conspirators certainly had potential manslaughter on their conscience if the crash had caused further accidents.xpensive wrote:Besides, first offenders in sport's most flagrant doping-cases rarely get more than a year or so do they?