myurr wrote:What I find strange and disturbing all in one is that you find the right to a fair trial to be a legal loophole. And that is why we will never agree on this.
Briatore had his chance to a fair trial, but he choose to disregard the charges and stay away from the hearing. He was probably aware that by retiring as Renault's principal he would deny the FiA the chance to punish him in accordance with EU law. He did not manage to stop the hearing and the guilty verdict. The Paris court did not look into the question of Briatore's guilt or innocense for race fixing. They only looked into the question if the procedural quality was suitable to punish two privat citizen who knew nothing of the Renault case and had not received any documents in their privat capacity. Briatore's lawyer sold the court the story that the retirement had created a whole new legal situation which should have cancelled the hearing and started a new process of law against his privat clients and not Renault F1. That in my eyes was the legal loop hole because at the time of the conspiracy the natural person representing the legal entity Renault F1 was Briatore.
myurr wrote:And, just for the record, how would you for example have exposed the fact that Symmonds and Piquet were plotting this crash?
The whole world knew this right after the FiA investigation that was conducted at the 2009 Spa race weekend. Here is the time line:
July 28 2009 Monaco
Piquet flies to Monaco and chats with Mosley, relays his knowledge of the race fix. Mosley says he has already been told by Whiting. Mosley reiterates Whiting’s comment that there can be no case without evidence from his son. The same day Briatore sends a letter to Piquet Snr saying he is “extremely shocked”. ...
The stewards report to the world council notes that despite the letter and other exchanges Briatore orders no internal investigation.
August 27 2009 Spa, Belgium
Quest investigators watched by law firm of Sidley Austin and FIA stewards Lars Osterlind, Vassilis Despotopoulos,Yves Bacquelaine, Alan Donnelly and Herbie Blash question Fernando Alonso and Pat Symonds. Symonds admits a conversation has taken place with Piquet the previous year at Singapore over the race fix but said it was on Saturday and not Sunday and it was Piquet’s idea to fix the race. A suggestion he had taken as a joke. Symonds declines to answer most of the key questions explaining he wants to “reserve his position a little” Alonso denies all knowledge.
August 28 2009 Spa, Belgium
Briatore flies into Spa. Has he been alerted to the questioning of his staff? It’s difficult to believe he hasn’t been. He denies all knowledge of, or any part in, a fix. He admits there was a meeting with Symonds and Piquet....
August 30 2009 Spa, Belgium
Brazilian paper O Globo breaks the story of the investigation. FIA refuse to confirm anything other than that an investigation is going on.
September 2009
The FIA summons Renault, Briatore, and Symonds to appear before the World Council on charges of bringing the sport into disrepute
September 16 2009
The FIA extend the deadline for Renault to prepare their defence but on deadline day Renault announce that Symonds has left the team, Briatore has quit and they will not be contesting the hearing on September 21.
September 18 2009
On the last working day before the hearing Alonso is suddenly summoned to appear before the World Council
September 21 2009
World Council hearing in Paris
It was in the papers by August 30 latest. Briatore had internal evidence since 29 July (see his letter) and did nothing about it until his Renault bosses kicked off the internal investigation (begin September) that he never did. So it wasn't a question of how to expose it. It was exposed! The question was: Why on earth was Briatore denying the whole thing until he was forced to retire on 15 September?
myurr wrote: And why do you believe that Briatore was better placed to uncover this plot than, say, Alonso?
Because Alonso was only a driver charged to drive the car. Briatore was team principal charged to run the team inside all regulations and the sporting code. At only a whiff of a suspicion of race fixing his only reaction could have been to grill both conspirators and immediately suspend both. He fired Piquet in Hungary but not Symmonds which after Symmond's Spa testimony was completely irresponsible.