Barcelona President Denies Any Crime in Refereeing Scandal
BARCELONA (AFP) - Barcelona president Joan Laporta insisted Monday his club never tried to cheat amid investigations into payments made to a former refereeing chief.
In a two-hour news conference, he said there was a smear campaign against Barcelona and the head of La Liga for backing the case against the Catalan club, who are top of the league.
“Obviously referees were not bought and there was no attempt to influence their decisions,” he told reporters gathered at the club’s Camp Nou stadium.
“Barcelona has never done anything with the aim or intention of adulterating the competition in order to gain a sporting advantage.”
Last month Spanish prosecutors charged the Catalan club with corruption after payments of more than 7.3 million euros ($7.8 million) to a company owned by a former refereeing chief were uncovered earlier this year.
Barcelona say they paid Jose Maria Enriquez Negreira, the former referee and ex-vice president of the refereeing committee of the Spanish football federation (CTA) between 1994 and 2018, for reports and advice related to refereeing.
Barcelona ceased its payments in 2018 due to Negreira’s departure from the CTA, according to Spanish prosecutors.
Laporta said the payments were for “sports advisory services” such as advice on recruiting “which are common in professional sport”.