D
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Scraping the barrel now marra.
You want her to sack an employee based on evidence she should be able to guess?!?
Try reading it again.
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Scraping the barrel now marra.
You want her to sack an employee based on evidence she should be able to guess?!?
I've seen that a lot this thread. Not sure it's true. SAFC could sack him on what was disclosed on the basis what they'd seen showed he had behaved inappropriately (irrespective of whether he was guilty of a criminal offence) without prejudicing the case. Say someone was up for a sexual assault in the club's dressing room, and they said well I had sex with the women in the changing room, but it was consensual, the club could sack him irrespective of whether he was guilt because of the admissions. In the same light, irrespective of whether he was guilty of the offences, they could have sacked him IMO. But as I said before, suspending with pay would have been the sensible option in all this.
More than likely noone will ever find out what "really" happened and everyone will get bored and move onto the next moral panicFrom the Daily Mail.
. The case also raises questions for Sunderland, who allowed Johnson to continue playing for them even after he told them he had groomed the girl.
There is no ambiguity there. This is going to rumble on for some time and is going to get messy.
Scraping the barrel now marra.
You want her to sack an employee based on evidence she should be able to guess?!?
Try reading it again.
There would have been no claim against SAFC if he had been suspended on full pay and then found not guilty. That has been establised by caselaw and is the absolute standard procedure for something like this:
The EAT added that if an employee is suspended on full pay whilst disciplinary proceedings are suspended pending the outcome of a criminal investigation, it would be unusual to criticise the employer for the delay incurred.
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Given that the charge brought at the time made it highly probable that some of the CPS evidence was going to take the form of text messages or internet transcripts (as that is nearly always the evidence that is gathered in a charge related to grooming), then there was no option but to suspend on full pay. This is the charge that was announced in April:
"We have reviewed the available evidence in accordance with the Code for Crown Prosecutors and concluded that there is a realistic prospect of conviction and it is in the public interest to charge Adam Johnson with one offence of meeting a child following sexual grooming, contrary to Section 15 of the Sexual Offences Act 2003 and three offences of sexual activity with a child, contrary to Section 9 of the Sexual Offence Act 2003. The alleged offences date from 30 December 2014 to 26 February 2015."
A criminal lawyer like Byrne will have been able to guess what evidence the CPS had, so will have known to suspend him - and that is what happened.
But then for some reason, according to Johnson's QC, she has lifted the suspension, attended a meeting with Johnson, and asked to actually see what evidence the prosecution have in their possession. Then after reviewing it she has decided to continue to make him available for selection. It's a baffling series of decisions, and so poorly thought out for someone of her experience that I can't see that she has made them alone.
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More than likely noone will ever find out what "really" happened and everyone will get bored and move onto the next moral panic
It's been a long time since I did law because I was f***ing shite at it but aren't barristers obliged to tell the crown if a client is guilty? Solicitors can be as underhand as they like in that position, sure barristers can't be.
His post clearly says suspended on full pay, not sacked, and as the post goes on to say, given it appears the club had the police station deps. and whatsapp messages later on anyway, had the information.
Can we just acknowledge the elephant in the room and admit that SAFC possibly saw him as a diminishing commodity and made a call to make the most of him whilst he's available.
Does football suddenly have a moral conscience?
Can we just acknowledge the elephant in the room and admit that SAFC possibly saw him as a diminishing commodity and made a call to make the most of him whilst he's available.
Does football suddenly have a moral conscience?
Did they? The police said they didn't give them the evidence and of course why would they. Its not an employers place to judge guilt of a crime, that's what we have court cases for. If he and his lawyer had said they were going to plead guilty, then the club would have fired him there and then. But because they said they were going to plead not-guilty, it leaves the club in a crappy position. We can discuss suspension or no-suspension until the cows come home, it was a decision that was made by the Club with input from the PFA and they decided to let him play until the trial. Personally I'm fine with that, innocent until proven guilty.His post clearly says suspended on full pay, not sacked, and as the post goes on to say, given it appears the club had the police station deps. and whatsapp messages later on anyway, had the information.
That would be vaguely manageable if they just came out and said it.
I stopped reading after Byrne should have been able to guess what evidence they had.
It may appear that way to you but you have no idea whether that's true or not, the important information as far as the club were concerned was whether he was guilty or not.
He'll never play football again, he's lost his girlfriend and he's not going to see his daughter grow up until she's potentially at school. I think that's more than enough punishment myself like.Hope the filthy bastard gets a real lesson in life with the sentence.
Just plain wrong what the bastard was up to.
Did they? The police said they didn't give them the evidence and of course why would they.
I'm reasonably confident he would have found a more subtle way to raise/address the issue.
Did they? The police said they didn't give them the evidence and of course why would they. Its not an employers place to judge guilt of a crime, that's what we have court cases for. If he and his lawyer had said they were going to plead guilty, then the club would have fired him there and then. But because they said they were going to plead not-guilty, it leaves the club in a crappy position. We can discuss suspension or no-suspension until the cows come home, it was a decision that was made by the Club with input from the PFA and they decided to let him play until the trial. Personally I'm fine with that, innocent until proven guilty.
What I am not ok with is the potential sentence. As others have stated, you can murder someone and get 7 years, yet you kiss and fumble about with a girl, who is months away from being 16, and you get possibly up to 10 years? That is frankly ridiculous.
Johnson is still a dick of the highest order like.
Its completely inadmissible man. Did you see it raised in this trial he had been suspended for 2 weeks without pay? No, it would be a complete mistrial because that can't bias the juries view. Whether we suspended him with pay, kept him at the club but not play him, or kept playing him... it would have no bearing on the trial and no judge would allow it to. Imagine a rape trial where someone was suspended with pay during proceedings and the defence barrister raised it. The judge would stop the case and say what the fuck does this have to do with your clients defence? For a start whether he was sacked, suspended or flogged has no bearing on the offences as they were committed BEFORE anything the club did. It's just irrelevant and a judge wouldn't allow it.
Johnson's QC said he was present in a meeting with AJ and Byrne where he admitted kissing her. He also said he gave the club the whatsapps and this wasn't disputed by the prosecution, nor by the club in their statement.
The max. sentence is 10 year but that also includes much more serious things than what AJ did (much like murder goes up to life without parole). AJ will get 2 - 3 years, and most of it isn't for the kissing, but the exploitation of a position of trust and grooming