Making_Splinters wrote:
As I said above this is a sad day for all concerned, the desperation of certain parties to net a high profile name has cost the game any solid result in this matter.
Making_Splinters wrote:The FA will struggle to pin anything on Terry now that he has been found Not Guilty in a Court of Law especially after the case hinged on the inability of the prosecution to produce any solid evidence that Terry had actually commited an offence.
Personally I would have actually prefered the case to be formally thrown out rather than any verdict be given which would have opened the way for the FA to press through its own process utilising the differing levels of proof that are required.
As I said above this is a sad day for all concerned, the desperation of certain parties to net a high profile name has cost the game any solid result in this matter.
ddb wrote:FA will investigate this still though, I think.
rich1uk wrote:gotta agree with M-S here , this should never have gone to court
also agree with ddb's comment above, the FA will surely have to do something as based on what we know, and admittedly we dont know everything about the two cases, i cant see the difference between the terry-ferdinand incident and the suarez-evra one which suarez got banned for
sussexpob wrote:Making_Splinters wrote:The FA will struggle to pin anything on Terry now that he has been found Not Guilty in a Court of Law especially after the case hinged on the inability of the prosecution to produce any solid evidence that Terry had actually commited an offence.
Personally I would have actually prefered the case to be formally thrown out rather than any verdict be given which would have opened the way for the FA to press through its own process utilising the differing levels of proof that are required.
As I said above this is a sad day for all concerned, the desperation of certain parties to net a high profile name has cost the game any solid result in this matter.ddb wrote:FA will investigate this still though, I think.
We have a solid result.... that Ferdinand's accusation was untrue or lacked sufficient proof to be taken as truth. The English court system could not prove otherwise, so in the fundamental principles of justices he should be found not guilty and the FA's puppet investigation should accept a high powers application and interpretation of the events and get on with it. Its not like a declaration of "Nolle prosequi" in this instance would make much sense because there was no other sources of data or proof that could subsequently come out to change the decision or continue the investigation.
I have a MASSIVE problem with a lower power or non professional legal body dishing out summary justice when a court has already ruled on the matter. Its not the place of the FA to contradict a court of law's higher level of proof, especially with such a reputation busting thing as accusations of racism.
I know people hate John Terry but the right thing happened. And people who bemoan the courts wasting their time are also probably the people who campaigned to get him to court to answer his case
sussexpob wrote:If a court trawls through all the evidence and cant find any wrong doing, then why would a less thorough and qualified investigation reap a fair result???
rich1uk wrote:sussexpob wrote:If a court trawls through all the evidence and cant find any wrong doing, then why would a less thorough and qualified investigation reap a fair result???
because the standards of evidence are different ... its the same thing , what constitutes bringing the game into disrepute and chargeable by the FA is completely different to what constitutes having committed a crime
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