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The Sunday papers will have something to say on the matter
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The Sunday papers will have something to say on the matter
Potentially is the key word.
Do you not think it a better stance to give the club the benefit of the doubt before believing all of the rubbish that's written about them?
We would all (well most of us) love the club to come out and clarify all of these issues but to think that's a simple thing to do given the current media witch hunt is naive in the extreme.
It wasnt libelous. SillyWe aren't the ones being warned for libelous posts
Reasonably, without further information, no. But what's reason got to do with it?Can this be argued anymore![]()
Byrne has fucked up massively and needs to go. End of story.
Cisses morals fucked off for good didnt theyI'd better report this one just to be absolutely sure you fuck off for good.
I think the conduct of the police may be mentioned by the judge in his closing address ....... just a hunch.
Similarly the story doesn't appear to have made the BBC's top ten news items any time today.
Sadly I suspect it's just the calm before the storm and it'll all come back with a vengeance when Johnson is sentenced.
It just seems to be the same arguments on a loop for 290 pages, it's all pointless because no-one is gonna say 'Yer knar what, I've change me mind yer spot on!'.Can this be argued anymore![]()
This thread is boring as fuck .
It rather pales into insignificance compared to the number of times it has needed (and still needs) to be pointed out that the main issue is the allegations made about the club's meeting with Johnson in May 2015 and the club's non-denial of those allegations.
I agree, people are getting into a bit of confusion regarding the police meeting with the club and other meeting(s). But in terms of the post I was replying to, the winner and PF record holder is how many times, now in the hundreds, that people have ignored the main point about the club's statement
Good peice by David Conn - The Guardian
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You must be logged on to see external linksfootball club and the once-distinguished Professional Footballers Association were not called as witnesses in the trial of Adam Johnson’s sordid crimes, but it would have been instructive to see their officials engage with the legal duty to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. So far they are falling short in the middle part of that responsibility, with their weaselly, pathetic responses to glaring questions about why Johnson was allowed to turn out, wearing Sunderland’s famous red and white striped shirt, in the globally broadcast Premier League, for 11 months after he was charged.
You must be logged on to see external linksweaves a claimed justification while avoiding the assertion landed on the club’s chief executive, Margaret Byrne, by Johnson’s barrister, Orlando Pownall QC. He said in court, apparently seeking to portray Johnson in some kind of better light, that on 4 May last year, Byrne saw the police interviews which showed Johnson admitted he had exchanged hundreds of messages with (ie groomed) and kissed the 15-year-old supporter and customer of Byrne’s club.
In the focus which has rightly turned on Sunderland, the nasty effects of Johnson’s legal case could be lost: Pownall’s argument that Byrne knew Johnson admitted it applies to his client too. Yet presumably with legal advice including from Pownall, Johnson decided to put his schoolgirl victim through a nightmare, by playing on for his £60,000 a week and not pleading guilty until the doors of court. how “horrendous” Johnson’s public denials had been for her, because “I’ve had to face so much abuse after he claimed his innocence”.
The impression is that Johnson’s lawyers calculated the victim might crack and withdraw her allegations as the ordeal of giving public evidence grew closer and Johnson pleaded guilty only when she stayed strong enough. Neither Pownall nor Paul Morris of Burton Copeland, Johnson’s solicitor, responded to the Guardian’s questions about their conduct of Johnson’s case.
Having been exposed for the 4 May meeting, Sunderland have relied for justification on that same calculating strategy, that Johnson was not pleading guilty. On what Byrne knew, there is some unattractively evasive wording: the meeting with Pownall, Johnson and Johnson’s father was “introductory”; Byrne was present “during part” of it; “some documents were received which were immediately sent to Mr Pownall for his attention” – even though Pownall was there.
Sunderland’s statement avoids the question of what Margaret Byrne, the club’s chief executive, knew. Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA
The statement avoids the question of what Byrne knew, and she has failed to answer it herself. Instead, the manager Sam Allardyce was sent out to do a standard pre-match press conference in which the unfortunate Louise Wanless, the club’s media and communications manager, had to .
Last season, with Johnson playing, they finished three points above relegation. Now, at serious risk of going down this time, the goal Johnson scored in the 6 February 2-2 draw with Liverpool, most likely the last game he will play as a professional footballer, could preserve Sunderland their guaranteed £100m from next season’s Premier League TV rights. Survival will presumably justify Byrne’s own salary, which was £663,196 in 2013-14, and by then, Sunderland are surely figuring, they will have outlasted all these inconvenient questions.
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I fear that the other bloke was joking and your genuinely trying to use this as a way to get at mags lol.
There are plenty of people that support newcastle that are rightly arrested and trialled, whats your point ahha im not in charge of all newcastle fans.
5 live were running hard with it up to and including the 9 o'clock headlines, after that it disappeared completely, also been taken down fro BBC News web site, seems strange
Attention seeking probably. Mates with that woman from the Women's movement, or whatever it is.Absolutely true but I wonder if that's the case in this instance.
Thing is as fans do we really want silence? Or do we want conclusive proof that our club didn't harbour someone that they could have possibly suspected would go down for this?