Dimples wrote:Outcast wrote:https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-11737933/Ahead-game-Manchester-Citys-furious-rivals-claim-Pep-Guardiolas-attack-libellous.html
Sounds like the cowards are retracting
To me it read like support for the PL clubs and Levy?
john68 wrote:No Mase mate, they are not saying that.
They have mentioned a rule number and a season and we have deduced that it alludes to Mancini.
It is believed to allude to a contract between Mancini and the Al Jazeera club.
What we think the Prem is accusing us of is that the Al Jazeera fee was paid by City as a shadow wage.
Even if City did pay him, the tax bill would be the responsibilty of Mancini to pay, not City. Nowt to do with City.
Mancini has every right with City's permission to make any deals with anyone he likes.
If the accusation were true. City would have failed to account for it and it would have skewed City's accounting.
Also note that FFP wasn't in force then anyway.
john68 wrote:1) This not a court case.
2) The Premier League is a private organisation and as such can set any terms and conditions it chooses, as long as they are not beyond the parameters of English law.
Example;- A club can set its own standards of dress code or bar you entry.
3) The charges made against us are not specific and at this point, they assert that we broke Premier league rule. There are no charges against us that say we broke the law.
Example;- Under the Premier Leagues FFP rules,we are not allowed to spend beyond an agreed percentageof our income. That is against the Prem's rules but not against English law.
4) The investigation is concerned whether we broke rules NOT that we did anything illegal.
5) The Prem has an agreed infrastructure to deal with rule breakers;- a) It has an agreed right to investigate any rule breakers. b) It has the agreed right to set up a panel to judge. c) It has the agreed right to issue whatever sanctions it thinks fit against any rule breakers, d) It has the agreed right to set up its own panel to judge any issue, e) It has the agreed right to hear any evidence in secret, f) It has the agreed right to deny anyone sanctioned any appeal to the CAS. and g) It can set the level of proof necessary to prove guilt as long as 2/3rds of its member agree...... It is not a court of English law.
All of the above has been agreed to by all clubs in the Premier League. Added to that, any issue that has the support of 2/3rds of the members has to be accepted by the other 1/3rd.
Important to this issue is that City have not been accused of doing anything illegal, City are only accused of breaking rules set by the Prem and agreed by its members, including City..
Whether we like it or not and I certainly don't, that's what we're stuck with.
Though an appeal to CAS is denied to us, I am told that there are 2 routes of appeal to the courts;- Substantive Jurisprudence and Serious Irregularities.
I think the above terms mean that the Prem doesn'r have jurisdiction and the other is that the Prem haven't followed their own procedures properly.
If anyone can expand on those terms please do so. It would help our understanding enormously
patrickblue wrote:john68 wrote:1) This not a court case.
2) The Premier League is a private organisation and as such can set any terms and conditions it chooses, as long as they are not beyond the parameters of English law.
Example;- A club can set its own standards of dress code or bar you entry.
3) The charges made against us are not specific and at this point, they assert that we broke Premier league rule. There are no charges against us that say we broke the law.
Example;- Under the Premier Leagues FFP rules,we are not allowed to spend beyond an agreed percentageof our income. That is against the Prem's rules but not against English law.
4) The investigation is concerned whether we broke rules NOT that we did anything illegal.
5) The Prem has an agreed infrastructure to deal with rule breakers;- a) It has an agreed right to investigate any rule breakers. b) It has the agreed right to set up a panel to judge. c) It has the agreed right to issue whatever sanctions it thinks fit against any rule breakers, d) It has the agreed right to set up its own panel to judge any issue, e) It has the agreed right to hear any evidence in secret, f) It has the agreed right to deny anyone sanctioned any appeal to the CAS. and g) It can set the level of proof necessary to prove guilt as long as 2/3rds of its member agree...... It is not a court of English law.
All of the above has been agreed to by all clubs in the Premier League. Added to that, any issue that has the support of 2/3rds of the members has to be accepted by the other 1/3rd.
Important to this issue is that City have not been accused of doing anything illegal, City are only accused of breaking rules set by the Prem and agreed by its members, including City..
Whether we like it or not and I certainly don't, that's what we're stuck with.
Though an appeal to CAS is denied to us, I am told that there are 2 routes of appeal to the courts;- Substantive Jurisprudence and Serious Irregularities.
I think the above terms mean that the Prem doesn'r have jurisdiction and the other is that the Prem haven't followed their own procedures properly.
If anyone can expand on those terms please do so. It would help our understanding enormously
Although what you're saying is correct, I think you're over simplifying this.
It's obvious this isn't a court case, but the PL are accusing us of supplying umpteen years of false accounts, which is very illegal.
Usually if a private organisation is disciplining an employee or member who is charged with a criminal activity, they will wait for a guilty verdict before doing so,
In this case they are taking it upon themselves to judge whether these infringements, which are also criminal have taken place.
I agree it's their organisation, and we've signed up to their rules, and technically two thirds of the membership could say we're guilty, and that would be that.
But by saying we've been falsifying published accounts, they've taken away their power to punish internally, by opening a whole new can of worms that can be challenged in a court of law.
Which is why all the legal bods are saying it will rumble on for years.
Dimples wrote:patrickblue wrote:john68 wrote:1) This not a court case.
2) The Premier League is a private organisation and as such can set any terms and conditions it chooses, as long as they are not beyond the parameters of English law.
Example;- A club can set its own standards of dress code or bar you entry.
3) The charges made against us are not specific and at this point, they assert that we broke Premier league rule. There are no charges against us that say we broke the law.
Example;- Under the Premier Leagues FFP rules,we are not allowed to spend beyond an agreed percentageof our income. That is against the Prem's rules but not against English law.
4) The investigation is concerned whether we broke rules NOT that we did anything illegal.
5) The Prem has an agreed infrastructure to deal with rule breakers;- a) It has an agreed right to investigate any rule breakers. b) It has the agreed right to set up a panel to judge. c) It has the agreed right to issue whatever sanctions it thinks fit against any rule breakers, d) It has the agreed right to set up its own panel to judge any issue, e) It has the agreed right to hear any evidence in secret, f) It has the agreed right to deny anyone sanctioned any appeal to the CAS. and g) It can set the level of proof necessary to prove guilt as long as 2/3rds of its member agree...... It is not a court of English law.
All of the above has been agreed to by all clubs in the Premier League. Added to that, any issue that has the support of 2/3rds of the members has to be accepted by the other 1/3rd.
Important to this issue is that City have not been accused of doing anything illegal, City are only accused of breaking rules set by the Prem and agreed by its members, including City..
Whether we like it or not and I certainly don't, that's what we're stuck with.
Though an appeal to CAS is denied to us, I am told that there are 2 routes of appeal to the courts;- Substantive Jurisprudence and Serious Irregularities.
I think the above terms mean that the Prem doesn'r have jurisdiction and the other is that the Prem haven't followed their own procedures properly.
If anyone can expand on those terms please do so. It would help our understanding enormously
Although what you're saying is correct, I think you're over simplifying this.
It's obvious this isn't a court case, but the PL are accusing us of supplying umpteen years of false accounts, which is very illegal.
Usually if a private organisation is disciplining an employee or member who is charged with a criminal activity, they will wait for a guilty verdict before doing so,
In this case they are taking it upon themselves to judge whether these infringements, which are also criminal have taken place.
I agree it's their organisation, and we've signed up to their rules, and technically two thirds of the membership could say we're guilty, and that would be that.
But by saying we've been falsifying published accounts, they've taken away their power to punish internally, by opening a whole new can of worms that can be challenged in a court of law.
Which is why all the legal bods are saying it will rumble on for years.
That is my understanding as well.
The PL 'independent commission' will 100% find us guilty. Then we appeal to a real independent body (the courts?). That will be the defining ruling.
Same as the UEFA charge. They found us guilty, two year ban. We appeal to independent CAS, that is the ruling that counted.
I am assuming that there is some independent appeals mechanism (even though the PL will have tried to block this with their rule book).
dick dastardley wrote:One thing that's crossed my mind in all of this bollox, the timing of the case, it would totally disrupt our season (they hope) therefore giving other rivals an unfair advantage. If they had done this in the summer then it would have been fair and proper!! City could and should have been notified in private and then told the PL to announce their shite after the season finishes.
Dimples wrote:patrickblue wrote:john68 wrote:1) This not a court case.
2) The Premier League is a private organisation and as such can set any terms and conditions it chooses, as long as they are not beyond the parameters of English law.
Example;- A club can set its own standards of dress code or bar you entry.
3) The charges made against us are not specific and at this point, they assert that we broke Premier league rule. There are no charges against us that say we broke the law.
Example;- Under the Premier Leagues FFP rules,we are not allowed to spend beyond an agreed percentageof our income. That is against the Prem's rules but not against English law.
4) The investigation is concerned whether we broke rules NOT that we did anything illegal.
5) The Prem has an agreed infrastructure to deal with rule breakers;- a) It has an agreed right to investigate any rule breakers. b) It has the agreed right to set up a panel to judge. c) It has the agreed right to issue whatever sanctions it thinks fit against any rule breakers, d) It has the agreed right to set up its own panel to judge any issue, e) It has the agreed right to hear any evidence in secret, f) It has the agreed right to deny anyone sanctioned any appeal to the CAS. and g) It can set the level of proof necessary to prove guilt as long as 2/3rds of its member agree...... It is not a court of English law.
All of the above has been agreed to by all clubs in the Premier League. Added to that, any issue that has the support of 2/3rds of the members has to be accepted by the other 1/3rd.
Important to this issue is that City have not been accused of doing anything illegal, City are only accused of breaking rules set by the Prem and agreed by its members, including City..
Whether we like it or not and I certainly don't, that's what we're stuck with.
Though an appeal to CAS is denied to us, I am told that there are 2 routes of appeal to the courts;- Substantive Jurisprudence and Serious Irregularities.
I think the above terms mean that the Prem doesn'r have jurisdiction and the other is that the Prem haven't followed their own procedures properly.
If anyone can expand on those terms please do so. It would help our understanding enormously
Although what you're saying is correct, I think you're over simplifying this.
It's obvious this isn't a court case, but the PL are accusing us of supplying umpteen years of false accounts, which is very illegal.
Usually if a private organisation is disciplining an employee or member who is charged with a criminal activity, they will wait for a guilty verdict before doing so,
In this case they are taking it upon themselves to judge whether these infringements, which are also criminal have taken place.
I agree it's their organisation, and we've signed up to their rules, and technically two thirds of the membership could say we're guilty, and that would be that.
But by saying we've been falsifying published accounts, they've taken away their power to punish internally, by opening a whole new can of worms that can be challenged in a court of law.
Which is why all the legal bods are saying it will rumble on for years.
That is my understanding as well.
The PL 'independent commission' will 100% find us guilty. Then we appeal to a real independent body (the courts?). That will be the defining ruling.
Same as the UEFA charge. They found us guilty, two year ban. We appeal to independent CAS, that is the ruling that counted.
I am assuming that there is some independent appeals mechanism (even though the PL will have tried to block this with their rule book).
john68 wrote:1) This not a court case.
2) The Premier League is a private organisation and as such can set any terms and conditions it chooses, as long as they are not beyond the parameters of English law.
Example;- A club can set its own standards of dress code or bar you entry.
3) The charges made against us are not specific and at this point, they assert that we broke Premier league rule. There are no charges against us that say we broke the law.
Example;- Under the Premier Leagues FFP rules,we are not allowed to spend beyond an agreed percentageof our income. That is against the Prem's rules but not against English law.
4) The investigation is concerned whether we broke rules NOT that we did anything illegal.
5) The Prem has an agreed infrastructure to deal with rule breakers;- a) It has an agreed right to investigate any rule breakers. b) It has the agreed right to set up a panel to judge. c) It has the agreed right to issue whatever sanctions it thinks fit against any rule breakers, d) It has the agreed right to set up its own panel to judge any issue, e) It has the agreed right to hear any evidence in secret, f) It has the agreed right to deny anyone sanctioned any appeal to the CAS. and g) It can set the level of proof necessary to prove guilt as long as 2/3rds of its member agree...... It is not a court of English law.
All of the above has been agreed to by all clubs in the Premier League. Added to that, any issue that has the support of 2/3rds of the members has to be accepted by the other 1/3rd.
Important to this issue is that City have not been accused of doing anything illegal, City are only accused of breaking rules set by the Prem and agreed by its members, including City..
Whether we like it or not and I certainly don't, that's what we're stuck with.
Though an appeal to CAS is denied to us, I am told that there are 2 routes of appeal to the courts;- Substantive Jurisprudence and Serious Irregularities.
I think the above terms mean that the Prem doesn'r have jurisdiction and the other is that the Prem haven't followed their own procedures properly.
If anyone can expand on those terms please do so. It would help our understanding enormously
dick dastardley wrote:One thing that's crossed my mind in all of this bollox, the timing of the case, it would totally disrupt our season (they hope) therefore giving other rivals an unfair advantage. If they had done this in the summer then it would have been fair and proper!! City could and should have been notified in private and then told the PL to announce their shite after the season finishes.
patrickblue wrote:dick dastardley wrote:One thing that's crossed my mind in all of this bollox, the timing of the case, it would totally disrupt our season (they hope) therefore giving other rivals an unfair advantage. If they had done this in the summer then it would have been fair and proper!! City could and should have been notified in private and then told the PL to announce their shite after the season finishes.
I'm pretty sure that fact will be put forward as part of our defence.
Harry Dowd scored wrote:Further to this - :
Can a civil case lead to criminal charges?
Vice versa, a civil case can become a criminal case if substantial evidence is uncovered during the civil process that would prompt criminal investigation. A civil claim under contract law may, for instance, lead to a criminal fraud charge.
john68 wrote:Harry,
I fully understand what you are saying mate but we are not as yet being investigated by the HMRC.
If it were the HMRC who were accusing us, then this would be investigated by them, refered to the CPS and tried by a court of law.
and your point obviously stands.
As it is, we are being investigated by a private institution and they do not have the powers to enforce English Law, they could if they wished, take their evidence to the HMRC but as a private institution, they can only enforce their own rules as they have been agreed by the Premier League members.
The Premier League have no right to judge and prosecute the legality of City's accounting, they are not part of the judicial system.
patrickblue wrote:If the FA say we are guilty, then by definition they are saying we have published fraudulent accounts.
The it's up to whoever the legal entities to prosecute for fraud, and possibly HMRC for tax avoidance.
If we're found not guilty of fraud, that then says the FA are lying, incompetent or both.
We have been charged by the FA of breaking their rules by our own criminal actions,.
Whatever happens, we have redress to law
It would seem an extraordinarily risky thing to do on the part of the FA.
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