• SecretEmergency372@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Ok. Lets do that everywhere then. Scaffolders can’t scaffold if they’re investigated (not charged), pumbers can’t plum, teachers can’t teach etc etc.

    This section of the public honestly. Not to mention, these men have incredible celebrity status, wealth and attention thrust on them at a young age and will be targeted. They even have classes on it at that level, teaching them how to protect themselves. That’s not saying it isn’t true in some cases, but that’s where the law comes in.

    But if theres no charge then they shouldn’t be stopped from doing their jobs! Even then the Mendy case shows us it can be wrong.

  • hafrances@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Thomas Partey is such scum. I hate that he is part of my club. The fact that there’s two more women who have now come forward… awful, awful man.

    • AFC_IS_RED@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      I want him gone. Regardless of if he did or not the noise is distracting and more often than not there isn’t smoke without fire. The PL needs to overhaul their rules with clubs to allow for immediate removals and unregistered of players to discourage clubs from using them.

    • Tim-Sanchez@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      No they don’t? You can suspend players after an accusation, like United did with Greenwood. Especially if 5 people are making an accusation with the police investigating.

      A contract doesn’t mean teams are forced to pay players.

      • LeoLH1994@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        Gylifi, who was very important the previous season, never played for Everton again and had his contract run down after the “31 year old international” was arrested. And yet you could say that the indictment was because of this as they lost £45 mill without being able to get some of it back like they did with players like Iwobi later on. And the fact they were able to vanish a key player, who you wouldn’t think of as a vile sort, without once saying his name outright, and yet Greenwood is seen as a sympathetic figure for offences that were made very public, is a very courageous move.

  • jamiejgeneric@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    I’m surprised they go as far as to specify it’s a premier league manager; if it’s investigations from the 90s by the police that implies they’ve been in England a long time which really narrows down who it could be.

    • GuinnessRespecter@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      David Sullivan was pictured coming out of a London bizzy station a few months back, around the time this story first broke.

      The use of the phrase “boss” is intentionally vague as it suggests to the casual reader that it is actually a manager/coach that is responsible. Probably legal-driven slight of hand at work

  • roseguardin@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    The article mentions comparisons to the overarching policies the NFL and MLB have that allow the bodies to investigate regardless of whether the case has gone through the justice system. Is there something in UK law that would prevent the FA/PL from putting something like that into place? While I’m in no ways claiming that those policies are anywhere close to the effectiveness needed (look at the Texans and Deshaun Watson), it’s kind of crazy that a woman tried to report an assault to the FA and they sent her their guidelines…which apply to coaching minors, not reporting sexual violence.

    • friendofH20@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      I personally think the FA should have a policy against this. Cases like this bring the whole game into disrepute and it is on the official bodies to ensure propriety.

      If the police are investigating a player, he or she should not be allowed to play until they are cleared. Or an independent body appointed by the FA clears them of playing.

      I know some people believe that this will create a weekly parade of women accusing players of rape to win at fantasy football but like the leagues in the US show, there will still be more abusers going unpunished than those accused falsely.

  • AdComprehensive7879@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    wtf ever happen to the thomas partey’s case? like it has been a year plus and the investigation is still on going ? what the fuck are they doing? at least give us an update

    • depressingmirror2@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      They never got enough evidence to be able to charge him. It’s still technically under investigation and it’ll never be officially “dropped” but I think it’s all but over at this point.

      • afarensiis@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        In footballing terms only, that’s the part I have trouble with. I think he probably did it because I believe the women, and I really want him out of the club, but I’m never sure what a club should do in these situations. If they suspended him the second the accusations came forward, he would have been out of the club for a year and a half now with no end in sight. If the investigation is never dropped, but the police don’t have enough evidence to charge or drop (at this point), is his career over? Should it be the same for just some random guy that works at a Tesco in Mansfield? He’s not allowed to work until the investigation is dropped?

        • depressingmirror2@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          Yeah in the most cynical way. The whole thing is incredibly stupid. Thats why the club were right to do it the way they did. Just ignore it until they have no choice.

    • train4karenina@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Updating the public is irrelevant. The accused, the victim and just judicial system don’t care if the general public feel uninformed on progress and nor should they

      • PlausibleApprobation@alien.topB
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        10 months ago

        This is incorrect. One of the most quoted phrases in case law goes something like “Justice must not only be done, but must also be seen to be done.” (Rex v Sussex Justices)

        The judicial system has a duty not only to be just, but also to demonstrate to the public at large that it is being just. That’s why even if no wrongdoing has occurred, if there’s a way people might think it has occurred, the justice system has failed.

        • train4karenina@alien.topB
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          10 months ago

          Interesting quote didn’t know that, thanks.

          I think it overestimates the powers of the justice system. You can’t prevent someone posting something online and it going viral, surely?

          How would it stop people thinking something?

  • Radota2@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Who’s going to find an amusing way that is legally sound to tell us all who the people are, player likes to “party”, but who’s the boss?

  • FragmentOfZeus@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. We cannot have a situation where mere allegations can get someone suspended from their careers. We cannot have trials by media.

  • Taliesin_Neonblack@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    This thread needs a dishonorable mention of Boateng, who assaulted and abused his gf. The media went on a campaign saying she was lying, she was stalked and harassed and eventually ended up taking her own life.

    It’s absolutely mental that Bayern Munich even remotely considered letting him back in the squad and that it took considerable pressure to block it from the fans.

    • Remarkable-Ad8644@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Doesn’t Kingsley Coman have a domestic violence charge? Not surprising that Bayern would let Boateng back in lol

  • AlpacamyLlama@alien.topB
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    10 months ago

    Very difficult one. I mean, people should have the right to defend themselves. Suspending a player for an abuse allegation makes them look guilty in the eyes of the public, and there’s little way back for them.

    Antony is an example. I believe two of the charges have been dropped, and the third is potentially looking like it should be. Yet he’s still treated as a violent rapist by fans.

    Don’t take this as me defending a United player because I’m a United fan. If you offered me £20m for Antony today, I’d sell him. I think he’s awful.

    I don’t know what the answer is here. I appreciate not enough is done to support victims of such attacks, and the courts are so bad at dealing with them. But the alternative where we must simply believe an accuser without question doesn’t seem right either.

    I’m not sure we’ll ever be able to resolve the issue with sex crime allegations. Not many will provide evidence on a plate like Greenwood.

    • Fisktor@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Antonys wasnt even anything sexual was it? People still clump him in with greenwood

    • friendofH20@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      Antony is an example. I believe two of the charges have been dropped, and the third is potentially looking like it should be. Yet he’s still treated as a violent rapist by fans.

      Did you read the article? It clearly shows that when players don’t face consequences for reports of abuse this is what happens. They can bully or coerce victims to retract, run PR campaigns against accusers etc.

      Also there is no suggestion that the first charge that came out against Antony is about to be scuppered.

    • LucozadeBottle1pCoin@alien.topB
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      10 months ago

      And you absolutely do get pleople trying to take advantage of players and blackmail them or just use them for clout. Remember the allegations against Neymar?

      It’s a very difficult issue to resolve.