ajnotkeith
Senior Member
This would be the relevant bit of the law corresponding to your argument :It is same as their argument for Barca though.. they are saying Barca 'got something back' otherwise why do it.
Same applies on smaller scales to gifts to referees and liasing with them before after games etc.
I think Barca will argue that the goal posts have been changed and he was not seen as a public official at the time and cant be seen as that now. While they also bring up the threatening letter to Barca saying he could expose them etc as evidence... well is it not evidence that Barca also rejected that threat? Why would a threat count as evidence of wrong doing when Barca ignored it?
Payments made to public officials with a view to obtaining a licit benefit (also known as 'facilitating payments') are illegal in Spain. However, there are no quantitative or qualitative restrictions on gifts, travel, meals or entertainment. In this regard, there are two main criteria established by Spanish case law to determine if a gift or gratuity can be considered as an act of bribery:
- if the gift or gratuity offered or received is not 'socially acceptable'; and
- if the gift offered or received could affect the decision of the recipient.
According to the SCC, passive bribery takes place when a public official, for personal benefit or for that of a third party, performs one of the following actions:
- requests or receives a gift, payment or favour or accepts an offer or promise thereof, in exchange for carrying out an act in the exercise of their duties and position that constitutes a criminal offence, or for abstaining from performing their duties;
- subsequently requests or receives a gift, payment or favour, or accepts an offer or promise thereof, in exchange for carrying out an act which is inherent to his or her position;
- requests or receives a reward for having carried out the acts described above; or
- accepts a gift offered due to his or her position or powers.
So they do have to prove that we gave him the money in order for him to carry out an act or acts in our favour, as they charged him with passive bribery (seen above) meaning that there must have been a plan to carry out acts favouring Barca at some point.