The Federal Court has accepted the request for revocation of the capital gains process, presented by the FIGC prosecutor, and has thus reopened a sporting proceeding against Juventus.
ANSA learns it.
Sanctions only for Juve and its managers, the other clubs acquitted.
The FIGC prosecutor, Giuseppe Chine', asked for 9 penalty points for Juventus at the FIGC court called to evaluate the reopening of the sporting trial for capital gains, after the request for revocation of the dismissal sentence.
Chine' also asked for 16 months of inhibition for Agnelli, 20 and 10 days for Paratici, 10 months for Cherubini, 12 months for all the other directors.
"The penalty must be afflictive, Juventus in the standings must now finish behind Roma, outside the European Cup area".
Thus, ANSA learns, the FIGC prosecutor, Giuseppe Chinè, motivated his request for 9 penalty points for Juventus in the indictment before the Federal Court for the reopening of the capital gains process for the Juventus club and another 8 with the related penalties.
Currently, Juve are third with 37 points, Roma seventh with 34, ahead of Udinese at 25
The federal prosecutor Giuseppe Chiné also asked for a fine for the other clubs involved, keeping the requests for the other companies involved and for the deferred managers unchanged with respect to the first capital gains trial.
The defenses of the clubs then intervened on the admissibility of the revocation.
So now the federal court of appeal will have to rule on the application for revocation of the acquittal sentence requested by the prosecutor, deciding whether or not to reopen the trial.
JUVE DEFENSE: 'INADMISSIBLE APPEAL, ABSENT 'NEW FACTS''
Appeal "inadmissible, due to the absence, in the case in question, of the application conditions of this extraordinary remedy", i.e. of "new facts", according to the principle according to which "no one can be prosecuted or criminally convicted by the jurisdiction of the same State for an offense for which he has already been acquitted or convicted following a final judgment in accordance with the law and criminal procedure of that State".
Thus begins Juve's defense brief for the hearing of the Federal Court of Appeal for the motion to revoke the acquittal presented by the FIGC prosecutor's office on capital gains.
"None of the elements valued by the Federal prosecutor's office" in the context of market operations "demonstrates the