Last week, Spanish justice charged the Catalan club and several of its former managers with “corruption”, “breach of trust” and “false business records” following payments of more than 7.3 million euros to a company owned by Jose Maria Enriquez Negreira, a former head of the referees, also prosecuted, were discovered at the beginning of the year.
FC Barcelona claims to have paid the former head of the arbitration committee of the Spanish football federation (CTA) from 1994 to 2018 for reports and advice related to arbitration.
“There are payments recognized by Barcelona to the CTA vice-president, it’s something abnormal,” Tebas told Movistar Vamos channel.
“It is clear that this generates tension. The reputation of our football is at stake. I am ashamed. We have no explanation from Barcelona”, thundered the manager.
To put an end to the accusations, Barça president Joan Laporta claimed last Tuesday that his club had “never bought a referee”.
“Let it be clear that Barça has never bought a referee nor intended to buy referees. Absolutely never”, defended the leader during a conference.
On Monday, Laporta appeared emotional during a speech at the Camp Nou and said it was not weakness, but on the contrary proof of his desire to tackle his club’s critics. “Do not think that I am moved by weakness, I am because I really want to face all the villains who tarnish our image”, he hammered.
“There are fierce attacks that aim to smear our club, which have nothing to do with reality,” he continued.
The Barcelona public prosecutor’s office has launched proceedings once morest Barça as a legal person, as well as once morest its former presidents Josep Maria Bartomeu (from 2014 to 2020), and Sandro Rosell (between 2010 and 2014). Oscar Grau and Albert Soler, members of Mr Bartomeu’s former team, are also being prosecuted.
Former FC Barcelona coaches Luis Enrique and Ernesto Valverde will be called to testify in the legal proceedings, Spanish newspaper El Pais reported on Monday.
Reigning Spanish champions Real Madrid said on Sunday they would appear as a “civil party” in the case once it moves forward.
Sanctions once morest the club might range from “suspension of activity…to outright dissolution of the company”, Alberto Palomar, a law professor at Carlos III University in Madrid, told AFP. Madrid.