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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Sport
Reuters

Barcelona chief Joan Laporta launches scathing attack on Real Madrid and LaLiga over ‘Negreira Case’ scandal

Barcelona president Joan Laporta has claimed that all payments made by the club to a company owned by a senior refereeing official were for advisory matters and not to gain any illegal sporting advantage.

Laporta said an internal investigation conducted by the club did not show any wrongdoing in the ‘Negreira Case’ which he has said was an orchestrated campaign to discredit Barcelona.

He accused the president of LaLiga, Javier Tebas, of “trying to damage Barcelona's reputation” and attacked rivals Real Madrid, who have joined the prosecutor's case against Barcelona, saying Real had always been historicaly favoured by refereeing.

Spanish prosecutors last month filed a complaint against Barcelona over payments of €7.3million (£6.45million) from 2001 to 2018 to firms owned by Jose Maria Enriquez Negreira. Negreira was vice-president of the refereeing committee of the Spanish Football Association from 1993 to 2018.

A Barcelona court has agreed to take the case. UEFA has also opened a formal investigation for a potential violation of the European governing body's legal framework over the Negreira case.

On Monday, Laporta told a news conference that Barcelona, in its dealings with Negreira, had sought technical advice from “someone who has had a career in football”.

“The advice does not constitute any kind of misconduct or criminal offence,” he said.

Standing in front of a box in which he said that were 629 technical reports, 43 CDs and four aditional reports, Laporta said the professional advice was made with transparency and that invoices registered in Barcelona's accounting system had passed fiscal reviews.

“The Spanish Tax Department sent a letter to the Prosecutor's Office saying it could not prove that the payments to companies related to Mr. Negreira influenced the result of any match,” he said.

Laporta also urged UEFA to be fair to Barcelona in its investigation.

LaLiga told Reuters on Monday it would not issue any comments regarding Laporta’s accusations, saying: “The Nergreira case needs to be fully investigated by the proper authorities.”

Tebas said in March that he had reported the case to UEFA because no punishment could be handed down under Spanish sports law since three years had passed since the alleged infringements.

Reuters have asked Real Madrid for comment on Laporta's remarks.

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