Just in, he paid $100 million to avoid jail.
http://jalopnik.com/bernie-ecclestone-u ... 1616244924
Nice bold predictions there about German justice WhiteBlue.
If anything, it shows how spineless German "justice" is.
Has nothing to do with the country. He would have pulled this stunt off in any other country on this planet.GitanesBlondes wrote:If anything, it shows how spineless German "justice" is.
Read the article and you'll see mention that there is a proviso that allows any defendant to pay a sum to end a trial when certain conditions are met. You can't pull that off in any other country if such a proviso does not exist.SectorOne wrote:Has nothing to do with the country. He would have pulled this stunt off in any other country on this planet.GitanesBlondes wrote:If anything, it shows how spineless German "justice" is.
How much profit has he gotten out of his initial 50M bribe 9 years ago? A wild guess is more than 150M.jz11 wrote:selling indulgences 21st century style...
also having to pay to a state 100M isn't exactly - got away cheap, even if your net worth is 40 times that or so
What it tells you is that it's a calculated decision where he has already figured out far more money still exists to be made off of the commercial rights. He has something else planned in my opinion, which is why he was willing to dole out $100 million like it was pocket change.jz11 wrote:selling indulgences 21st century style...
also having to pay to a state 100M isn't exactly - got away cheap, even if your net worth is 40 times that or so
To make it more laughable: of the 100 million, 99 million goes to the Bavarian treasury, and only 1 million to charity. Only 1% goes to something good; the other 99% probably goes to either delving financial debts or redacorating the city centre or other kinds of wasting money. The trial costs what a couple of millions at most? Pay that off, keep 60-70% for the treasury and invest in charity with a bigger heart that isn't only 1/100 good.Kiril Varbanov wrote:That's an interesting twist of fate. Or it's not.
As usual, there are two sides of the coin. On one of the sides is Bernie's ability to maintain the status quo, the peace in F1 and the relationship between team bosses. Some say that the current level of competitiveness is down to his ability to play games. And that we owe everything that's good in F1 to Bernie. He's very approachable person, indeed. Anyone can schedule a meeting with him, as long as you talk sense, business or money. Some say that F1 wouldn't exist without him. My personal opinion doesn't reflect such views. People come and go. "The graveyards are full of indispensable men", Charles de Gaulle had said.
The other side of the coin is that this is, in simple terms, a crime. I'm certainly not a lawyer, but paying a bribe to bail out from a bribe trial is lack of dignity. And a pure disgrace mark on the sport's face. Based on that, my personal opinion (not my employers), as a fan, is that Bernie should go as soon as possible.
While I understand 100 million would be much more usable than an old man in a jail, this is promotion of bad standards. And this isn't against Germany's law system - no law system is perfect.
Today, it would seem that most prominent F1 figures revolve around this axis - that the move is pathetic.