The first degree criminal trial on
Calciopoli took place between 2008 and 2011 at the Naples court. During this trial, new wiretaps emerged mainly through the work of Moggi's legal team that had not been considered relevant in the 2006 investigations. The new evidential material involved, among others, the top two executives of Inter Milan at the time of the events, namely the president
Giacinto Facchetti, who died in 2006, and the owner
Massimo Moratti, who was Inter Milan's majority stakeholder and Facchetti's successor. In May 2010, Juventus presented a complaint to both CONI and the FIGC asking for the review of the decision to assign Inter Milan the 2005–06 title of Italian football champion. At the same time, the FIGC prosecutor Palazzi had already launched new investigations in this regard, which closed in June 2011 with the complaint of violations of the rules of loyalty, correctness, and probity to various clubs and employee who had not been involved in the 2006 sports trials. The sports illicit was contested at Inter Milan and in the person of Facchetti; however, Palazzi did not proceed to any charges because the facts had by now lapsed due to the statute of limitations. The FIGC took note of Palazzi's report approving by majority a resolution of the president
Giancarlo Abete with which the FIGC's Federal Council declared itself not competent on the application presented by Juventus. The subsequent appeal by Juventus to the National Court of Arbitration for Sport (TNAS), a body that in the meantime had been established by the CONI to replace the Conciliation and Arbitration Chamber for Sport, was also useless; the TNAS also declared itself not competent regarding the revocation of the 2006 championship assigned to Inter Milan. The new wiretaps did not get any effect even in the criminal trial in Naples, which ended in November 2011 with a substantial acceptance of the prosecution; heavy sentences were inflicted in particular on Bergamo, Moggi, and Pairetto, while Giraudo was sentenced in 2009 with a
summary judgment. After the outcome of the Naples trial in the first instance and the declaration of non-competence of the TNAS, Juventus filed an appeal to the TAR against the FIGC and Inter Milan in November 2011, asking for damages of approximately €444 million. According to Juventus's thesis, there was a difference in treatment on the facts of
Calciopoli between the events of 2006 and those of 2011. The club also cited the fact that the Naples first instance trial had already excluded their responsibility for the violations committed by its executives. The appeal to the TAR aroused critical reactions from Abete and CONI president
Gianni Petrucci, to whom Juventus president
Andrea Agnelli replied with the proposal to convene a discussion table to resolve the issue. For a few weeks, the possibility of a peaceful solution to the controversy hovered, as Petrucci convened what was called a peace table for 14 December 2011; however, the meeting did not resolve the controversy, and both Abete and Petrucci had to admit that the positions of the parties were too far apart.
Sports trial, July–August 2006 Charges According to the indictments, the executives of the clubs involved had relationships with referee designators to influence their team's match designations in order to obtain referees considered favourable. They were often supported or backed up by members of the federation involved in the investigation. Also according to the prosecution, it was common practice to forward recriminations and veiled threats against the referees considered unfavourable through the referee designators or the FIGC. The violations that the FIGC prosecutor Palazzi contested against the accused ranged from the violation of the rules of loyalty, fairness, and sports probity (Article 1 of the Sports Justice Code in force at that time) to sports offenses (Article 6 of the same code). Among the prominent names involved were Moggi and Giraudo for Juventus, charged of violating both Article 1 and Article 6; the brothers Della Valle for Fiorentina, charged of violating Article 6; Lotito for Lazio, accused of violating Article 6;
Adriano Galliani, charged of violating Article 1, and Meani, charged of violating both Article 1 and Article 6, for Milan; and
Pasquale Foti for Reggina, accused of violating both Article 1 and Article 6. Bergamo and Pairetto, the two CAN referee designators, were also involved in the scandal, as were several referees, such as Bertini, De Santis, Dondarini, Messina, Paparesta, Rocchi, Rodomonti, and Tagliavento. FIGC higher-ups, among them president Carraro and vice-president Mazzini, and Lanese were also charged. In regards to the clubs, Juventus was charged of having had direct responsibility in the violation of Article 2, Article 6, and Article 9 of the old Code of Sports Justice; Fiorentina was charged of having violated Article 2 for objective and direct responsibility, and Article 6; Lazio was charged of direct and presumed responsibility in the violation of Article 6, Article 2, and Article 9; Milan was charged of the violation for direct and objective responsibility of Article 2, and for objective responsibility of Article 6; and Reggina was charged with the violation of Article 6.
Indictment requests First line of investigation, 4 July 2006 Requests announced on 4 July 2006 in the first instance sports trial at the CAF by the FIGC prosecutor were the following: ; Clubs •
Juventus: exclusion from
Serie A and relegation to
Serie C1 with 6 penalty points, revocation of the 2004–05 title, and non-assignment of the 2005–06 title •
Fiorentina: relegation to
Serie B with 15 penalty points •
Lazio: relegation to Serie B with 15 penalty points •
Milan: relegation to Serie B with 3 penalty points ; Club executives • (Juventus CEO): 5 years with proposed ban •
Luciano Moggi (Juventus general director): 5 years with proposed ban •
Diego Della Valle (Fiorentina owner): 5 years with proposed ban • Andrea Della Valle (Fiorentina president): 5 years with proposed ban •
Claudio Lotito (Lazio president): 5 years with proposed ban •
Leonardo Meani (Milan employee): 5 years with proposed ban •
Sandro Mencucci (Fiorentina executive): 5 years with proposed ban •
Adriano Galliani (Milan vice-president and CEO, and
LNP president): 2 years ; Referees and referee assistants • : 5 years with proposed ban •
Massimo De Santis: 5 years with proposed ban • : 5 years with proposed ban •
Domenico Messina: 5 years with proposed ban • : 5 years with proposed ban •
Gianluca Rocchi: 5 years with proposed ban •
Paolo Tagliavento: 5 years with proposed ban •
Duccio Baglioni (referee assistant): 3 years •
Gianluca Paparesta: 1 year • (referee assistant): 1 year •
Claudio Puglisi (referee assistant): 1 year ; Referees and FIGC executives •
Paolo Bergamo (referee designator): 5 years with proposed ban •
Franco Carraro (
FIGC president): 5 years with proposed ban •
Innocenzo Mazzini (FIGC vice president): 5 years with proposed ban •
Tullio Lanese (AIA president): 5 years with proposed ban •
Pierluigi Pairetto (referee designator): 5 years with proposed ban •
Gennaro Mazzei (referee assistant designator): 2 years •
Pietro Ingargiola (pitch commissioner): 1 year
Second line of investigation, 8–9 August 2006 Requests announced on 8–9 August 2006 in the first instance sports trial at the CAF by the prosecutor Palazzi were the following: ; Clubs •
Reggina: relegation to Serie B with 15 penalty points •
Arezzo: relegation to Serie C1 with 3 penalty points ; Club executives •
Pasquale Foti (Reggina president): 5 years with proposed ban •
Leonardo Meani (Milan employee): 3 years ; Referees and referee assistants •
Stefano Titomanlio (referee assistant): 3 years • : 6 months • : 6 months ; Referee executives •
Gennaro Mazzei (referee assistant designator): 3 years
Judgments of first instance (Federal Appeals Commission) First line of investigations, 14 July 2006 The first line of investigations was pronounced on 14 July 2006 and sanctioned the following: ; Clubs •
Juventus: relegation to Serie B with 30 penalty points, revocation of the 2004–05 championship, non-assignment of the 2005–06 championship, and €80,000 fine •
Fiorentina: relegation to Serie B with 12 penalty points and €50,000 fine •
Lazio: relegation to Serie B with 7 penalty points and €40,000 fine •
Milan: 44 penalty points in the 2005–06 championship, 15 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship, and €30,000 fine ; Club executives • (Juventus CEO): 5 years with ban request and €20,000 fine •
Luciano Moggi (Juventus general director): 5 years with ban request and €50,000 fine •
Diego Della Valle (Fiorentina owner): 4 years and €30,000 fine • Andrea Della Valle (Fiorentina president): 3 years and 6 months and €20,000 fine •
Claudio Lotito (Lazio president): 3 years and 6 months and €10,000 fine •
Leonardo Meani (Milan employee): 3 years and 6 months •
Sandro Mencucci (Fiorentina executive): 3 years and 6 months •
Adriano Galliani (Milan vice-president and CEO, and LNP president): 1 year ; Referees •
Massimo De Santis: 4 years and 6 months • : 3 years and 6 months •
Gianluca Paparesta: 9 months • : acquitted •
Domenico Messina: acquitted •
Gianluca Rocchi: acquitted • : the CAF declared itself not competent •
Paolo Tagliavento: acquitted ; Referee assistants • : 1 year •
Claudio Puglisi: 1 year •
Duccio Baglioni: acquitted ; Referee designators and FIGC executives •
Innocenzo Mazzini (FIGC vice-president): 5 years with ban request •
Franco Carraro (FIGC president): 4 years and 6 months •
Tullio Lanese (AIA president): 2 years and 6 months •
Pierluigi Pairetto (referee designator): 2 years and 6 months •
Gennaro Mazzei (assistant referee designator): 1 year •
Pietro Ingargiola (pitch commissioner): admonished •
Paolo Bergamo (referee designator): not judged because he resigned
Second line of investigations, 16 August 2006 The second sentence was pronounced on 16 August 2006 and sanctioned the following: ; Clubs •
Reggina: 15 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship and €100,000 fine •
Arezzo: 9 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship ; Club executives •
Leonardo Meani (Milan employee): 3 years and €30,000 fine •
Pasquale Foti (Reggina president): 2 years and 6 months, and €30,000 fine to be paid to Milan ; Referees • : acquitted • : acquitted ; AIA members •
Gennaro Mazzei (referee assistant designator): 3 years •
Stefano Titomanlio (referee assistant): 3 years
Appeal judgments (FIGC's Federal Court of Appeal) First line of investigations, 25 July 2006 The CAF issued its appeal ruling on 25 July 2006 with the following results: ; Clubs •
Juventus: relegation to Serie B with 17 penalty points, revocation of the 2004–05 title, non-assignment of the 2005–06 title, €120,000 fine, and pitch disqualification (3 rounds) •
Fiorentina: 30 penalty points in the 2005–06 championship, 19 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship, €100,000 fine, and three rounds of disqualification of their own pitch •
Lazio: 30 penalty points in the 2005–06 championship, 11 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship, €100,000 fine, and two rounds of disqualification of their own pitch •
Milan: 30 penalty points in the 2005–06 championship, 8 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship, €100,000 fine, and one-round disqualification of their own pitch ; Club executives • (Juventus CEO): 5 years with ban request •
Luciano Moggi (Juventus general director): 5 years with ban request •
Diego Della Valle (Fiorentina owner): 3 years and 9 months • Andrea Della Valle (Fiorentina president): 3 years •
Claudio Lotito (Lazio president): 2 years and 6 months •
Leonardo Meani (Milan employee): 2 years and 6 months •
Sandro Mencucci (Fiorentina executive): 2 years and 6 months •
Adriano Galliani (Milan vice-president and CEO, and LNP president): 9 months ; Referees •
Massimo De Santis: 4 years •
Gianluca Paparesta: 3 months • : acquitted • : acquitted •
Paolo Tagliavento: acquitted •
Gianluca Rocchi: acquitted • : not to be judged ; Referee assistants • : 3 months •
Claudio Puglisi: 3 months •
Duccio Baglioni: acquitted ; Referee designators and FIGC executives •
Innocenzo Mazzini (FIGC vice-president): 5 years with ban request •
Pierluigi Pairetto (referee designator): 3 years and 6 months •
Tullio Lanese (AIA president): 2 years and 6 months •
Gennaro Mazzei (referee assistant designator): 6 months •
Franco Carraro (FIGC president): €80,000 fine with warning •
Pietro Ingargiola (pitch commissioner): reprimanded In July 2006, the 2005–06 Serie A championship was awarded to Inter Milan, as the FIGC accepted the opinion of the commission known as "The Three Sages" (composed of
Gerhard Aigner, former secretary general of the UEFA;
Massimo Coccia, lawyer and sports law expert; and
Roberto Pardolesi, professor of comparative private law), which was created by
Guido Rossi, the FIGC's extraordinary commissioner, to settle the issue after the non-assignment of the title to Juventus.
Second line of investigations, 26 August 2006 The second line of investigations was pronounced on 26 August 2006 and sanctioned the following: ; Clubs •
Reggina: 15 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship and €100,000 fine •
Arezzo: 6 penalty points in the 2006–07 championship ; Club executives •
Leonardo Meani (Milan employee): 3 years and €30,000 fine to be paid to Milan •
Pasquale Foti (Reggina president): 2 years and 6 months, and €30,000 fine ; Referees • : acquitted • : acquitted ; AIA members •
Gennaro Mazzei (referee assistant designator): 3 years •
Stefano Titomanlio (referee assistant): 3 years
Final judgments (CONI Sports Conciliation and Arbitration Chamber) Following the heavy penalties imposed by the FIGC's Federal Court of Justice, which was the last instance of judgment within the FIGC, all the clubs and defendants filed an appeal to the Conciliation and Arbitration Chamber established at CONI. As no conciliation was reached, an arbitration committee had to be set up on a case-by-case basis. Pending the clarification of the disputes, the FIGC suspended the accessory penalties, such as fines and disqualifications of the pitch; Carraro was acquitted by the arbitration. At first, the management of Juventus alone had instead filed an appeal with the TAR, thereby risking sanctions by the FIGC for violation of the arbitration clause that prohibited complaints to the ordinary courts: the request was the reassignment in Serie A (with a maximum penalty of 20 points) and the return of the two championships in question to the club. This request was based on the disproportion between the penalty inflicted on Juventus and those inflicted on the other clubs involved, a disproportion that had been quantified by the club's lawyers, after an assessment of the economic damage caused by the relegation, at €130 million. Through a letter, FIGC extraordinary commissioner Rossi distanced himself from the decisions of the club and announced with CONI a request for compensation against Juventus for having damaged the image of Italian football. Subsequently, Juventus's board of directors decided to withdraw the appeal to the TAR, avoiding a possible postponement of the start of the 2006–07 Serie A and Serie B championships, in order to try to obtain a reduction in the penalty in sports arbitration. The reverse of the Juventus management was controversial due to the threats by FIFA president
Joseph Blatter to exclude the entire FIGC from all international club and national team competitions for five years; the international regulations provided that if a club had resorted to an ordinary court, and the federation to which they belong had not prevented it, the latter would have been excluded from all foreign competitions. While the sanctions against the clubs's executives were issued on various dates in December 2006–June 2007, the CONI Chamber of Conciliation and Arbitration issued the definitive sanctions against the four clubs involved in the first line of investigations on 27 October 2006, and those of Arezzo and Reggina on 12 December 2006. ; Clubs •
Juventus: revocation of the 2004–05 title of Italian football champion (confirmed), non-assignment of the 2005–06 title of Italian football champion (confirmed), relegation to last place in the 2005–06 Serie A (confirmed), and 9 points penalty in the 2006–07 Series B (instead of the 17 imposed by the CAF) •
Fiorentina: 30 penalty points in 2005–06 Serie A (confirmed) and 15 penalty points in the 2006–07 Serie A (instead of the 19 imposed by the CAF) •
Milan: 30 penalty points in 2005–06 Serie A (confirmed) and 8 penalty points in 2006–07 Serie A (confirmed) •
Lazio: 30 penalty points in 2005–06 Serie A (confirmed) and 3 penalty points in 2006–07 Serie A (instead of the 11 imposed by the CAF) •
Reggina: 11 penalty points in 2006–07 Serie A (instead of the 15 imposed by the CAF) and €100,000 fine (confirmed) •
Arezzo: 6 penalty points in the 2006–07 Serie B (confirmed) ; Club executives •
Claudio Lotito (11 December 2006): 4 months (against 2 years and 6 months in the sentence of the CAF) •
Adriano Galliani (18 December 2006): 5 months (against 9 months in the sentence of the CAF) •
Luciano Moggi (7 March 2007): confirmed the 5 years with proposed ban (CONI declared itself incompetent, as Moggi was no longer a FIGC member) •
Diego Della Valle (27 March 2007): 8 months (against 3 years and 9 months in the sentence of the CAF) • Andrea Della Valle (27 March 2007): 1 year and 1 month (compared to 3 years in the sentence of the CAF) •
Sandro Mencucci (27 March 2007): 1 year and 5 months (against 2 years and 6 months in the sentence of the CAF) • (28 May 2007): confirmed the 5 years with proposed ban (CONI declared itself incompetent) •
Leonardo Meani (28 May 2007): 2 years and 2 months (against 2 years and 6 months in the sentence of the CAF) •
Pasquale Foti (5 June 2007): 1 year and 1 month (compared to 2 years and 6 months in the sentence of the CAF) ; Referees •
Massimo De Santis (10 May 2007): 4 years confirmed ; Referee designators and FIGC executives •
Franco Carraro (8 November 2006): €80,000 fine (fine confirmed but notice removed) •
Pierluigi Pairetto (28 March 2007): 2 years and 6 months (against 3 years and 6 months in the sentence of the CAF) •
Innocenzo Mazzini (12 April 2007): 5 years confirmed with proposed ban •
Tullio Lanese (6 July 2007): 1 year (against 2 years and 6 months in the sentence of the CAF) •
Gennaro Mazzei (11 June 2007): 2 years (against 3 years in the sentence of the CAF)
Lifetime bans On 15 June 2011, more than four years after the final rulings of the CONI arbitration, the CDN of the FIGC accepted the requests of a lifetime ban for Giraudo, Mazzini, and Moggi, who a month later would have finished serving the five-year ban. The long timing was due to the changes in the meantime in the FIGC's statute, not without controversy, which had transferred the power to decide on the requests for foreclosure from the FIGC president to the CDN. The lifetime ban, defined as the "foreclosure to stay in any rank and category of the FIGC", was also confirmed in the subsequent stages of judgment on 9 July 2011 by the FIGC's Federal Court of Justice, and on 4 April 2012 by the High Court of Sports Justice established at the CONI. On 3 August 2012, the III Section of the TAR rejected the instance with which Moggi requested the suspension of the provision of the CONI High Court of Justice.
Situation after the CONI ruling Following the rulings, the accepted clubs and relative point-deductions for the
Serie A and
Serie B championships in the 2006–07 season were as follows: ; Serie A •
Ascoli •
Atalanta •
Cagliari •
Catania •
ChievoVerona (
2006–07 UEFA Champions League) •
Empoli •
Fiorentina (–15 points) •
Inter Milan (2006–07 UEFA Champions League) •
Lazio (–3 points) •
Livorno (
2006–07 UEFA Cup) •
Messina •
Milan (–8 points, 2006–07 UEFA Champions League) •
Palermo (2006–07 UEFA Cup) •
Parma (2006–07 UEFA Cup) •
Reggina (–1 points) •
Roma (2006–07 UEFA Champions League) •
Sampdoria •
Siena (–1 point) •
Torino •
Udinese ; Serie B •
AlbinoLeffe •
Arezzo (–6 points) •
Bari •
Bologna •
Brescia •
Cesena •
Crotone •
Frosinone •
Genoa •
Hellas Verona •
Juventus (–9 points) •
Lecce •
Mantova •
Modena •
Napoli •
Pescara (–1 point) •
Piacenza •
Rimini •
Spezia •
Treviso •
Triestina (–1 point) •
Vicenza Consequences of sports sanctions Without the 15 penalty points, Fiorentina would have finished the season in third place instead of sixth and would have qualified for the
2006–07 UEFA Champions League qualifying rounds ahead of Milan (fourth with 69 points without –8) and Lazio, which started with –11 and remained –3 after the sentence of CONI, would have played in the UEFA Cup. Without the 11 penalty points, Reggina would have finished the championship in eighth place; the club had started from –15 but had a reduced penalty of four points due to the CONI ruling during the championship. Without those four removed penalty points, Reggina would have been relegated to Serie B in place of
ChievoVerona. Without the 6 penalty points, Arezzo would have finished in mid-table, while
Spezia would have been directly relegated
Lega Pro Prima Divisione, with
Hellas Verona and
Cesena playing in the playout. For Juventus, relegation to Serie B was the first in its history. The mathematical return to Serie A took place on 19 May 2007 after defeating Arezzo 5–1 away on the fourth last day of the championship. The 30 penalty points did not affect Milan's qualification for the 2006–07 Champions League, which they would go on to win, even though they had to play the summer qualifying rounds; UEFA had expressed many doubts about the possibility of involving a club involved in a scandal in an international competition. ==
Calciopoli bis ==