
speaking of character assasination!! do you have anything at all in terms of proof for your assertions?
One should not forget that Briatore twice declined the opportunity to defend himself and put the record straight. It does not shed a good light on his claim that he was a victim of revenge. Even if the WMSC was biased against him - as he claims - he should have exhausted his legal opportunities prior to bringing a private law suit against the federation. At least his "friend" Ecclestone was pushing for a less drastic punishment in the MWSC and Briatore could have done himself a favor by appearing before the counsil.Joe Saward wrote:He (Briatore) mumbled and grumbled to the media that Mosley was a beastly fellow and that the ex-FIA President had been “blinded by an excessive desire for personal revenge”. He accused the FIA of a breach “of the most basic rules of procedure and the rights to a fair trial”. He did not, of course, suggest that he was innocent of the charges.
I fully agree with the statement. I expect a comprehensive defeat for Briatore on January 5th when the judgement of Briatore vs FIA is released.Max Mosley wrote:Briatore should be the last person to complain the FIA have not treated him fairly. The FIA have repeatedly given him the benefit of the doubt. It did so when prohibited software was found in a car under his control; again when a component was removed from his team’s refuelling equipment; again when his team failed to declare properly the purpose of a particular suspension component, and most recently when they were caught with information illicitly acquired from another team. Each time his team was caught, the FIA accepted Briatore’s claim that he was not involved.
This time, however, it was different. There was overwhelming evidence he was directly involved in ordering Nelson Piquet Jnr to crash. And his conduct was particularly reprehensible because he was Piquet’s personal manager, the very person to whom a young driver would turn for advice if ordered to do something dangerous or unethical by his team. Once the FIA had a sworn statement from Nelson Piquet Jnr confirming he was ordered to crash, a full inquiry conducted by outside lawyers was inevitable. That inquiry, like Renault’s own investigation, established Briatore’s responsibility beyond question. The suggestion that all this was somehow manufactured for reasons of personal vengeance is a desperate and unsustainable argument.
I don't think the case is disputing Flav's guilt, otherwise he would most probably be comprehensively defeated.WhiteBlue wrote:I expect a comprehensive defeat for Briatore on January 5th when the judgement of Briatore vs FIA is released.
I agree that Briatore will and should lose, but his claim quoted above:Fil wrote:Joe Saward has some good blogs sometimes, other times he's quite ordinary i think. Still a good read & part of my bookmarked F1 routine.I don't think the case is disputing Flav's guilt, otherwise he would most probably be comprehensively defeated.WhiteBlue wrote:I expect a comprehensive defeat for Briatore on January 5th when the judgement of Briatore vs FIA is released.
But was he fairly judged? If this is what the case he has brought against the FIA, he has a fighting chance, especially when he was advised not to appear, as he, as an employee, was not to be the target of the case; the employer, Renault F1, was.
Briatore:
"..Mr Mosley explain that he expressed to me over the phone on September 19th 2009, that my presence at the hearing of the World Council of 21st September was neither necessary nor desirable, in the context of a difficult session for Renault, while since such hearing may, in any event, not result into any decision against myself."
If his legal team was able to prove that the FIA case was not about him or that they have no jurisdiction over individuals, he may just have won the civil case now.
does bear some examination."..Mr Mosley explain that he expressed to me over the phone on September 19th 2009, that my presence at the hearing of the World Council of 21st September was neither necessary nor desirable, in the context of a difficult session for Renault, while since such hearing may, in any event, not result into any decision against myself."
Errrr.. Star Wars perhaps?Ciro Pabón wrote:..but if this were Star Trek, he's Palpatine..
Shows up randomly to annoy the hell out of everyone...can conjure people who don't exist...thinks he's teaching people a lesson but is only really interested in stroking his own perceived omnipotence...I think you hit the nail on the head there.xpensive wrote:Hmm...MrE is perhaps more like "Q" in Star Trek Next Generation?
I don't know Jon, now that you have described him so eloquently, perhaps "Q" is more MrM than MrE afterall?jon-mullen wrote:Shows up randomly to annoy the hell out of everyone...can conjure people who don't exist...thinks he's teaching people a lesson but is only really interested in stroking his own perceived omnipotence...I think you hit the nail on the head there.xpensive wrote:Hmm...MrE is perhaps more like "Q" in Star Trek Next Generation?