Match fixing investigations of Norwegian Second Division

The match fixing investigations of the Norwegian Second Division association football league are two ongoing investigations that started in 2012 in Norway and in Sweden. The investigations have resulted in police charges currently pending against ten individuals.[1] Three players from Follo FK and two players from Asker Fotball are among those charged. The police investigation in Norway, are the first related to alleged match fixing in Norway.[2]

Timeline

The Norwegian Football Federation (NFF) made a police report on July 9, 2012, about alleged match fixing. Later that day Norway's then minister of culture announced that NFF, bookmaker Norsk Tipping and Norway's government will start work on a plan of action against match fixing.[3]

Norwegian police arrested a player from Follo FK on July 11, 2012. He was charged with receiving stolen goods (siktet for heleri) and for receiving benefits/money from match fixing.[4]

Follo FK's trainer, Hans Erik Eriksen on July 14, 2012, admitted to having been involved in "illegal acts, linked to the same environment that is being investigated in the [alleged] match fixing case".[5]

One player from Asker Fotball was arrested on October 19, 2012. He was charged with assisting in acts of grov corruption and assisting in grov fraud against a Norwegian bookmaker (Norsk Tipping).[6]

The police dismissed the case against the trainer of Follo FK, on October 4, 2012.

A Swedish prosecutor (Thomas Forsberg) said on December 3, 2012, that Sweden has an investigation that is separate of Norway's investigation.[7] In advance of this, Swedish police had arrested two inhabitants of Växjö, Sweden.[8]

Norway's then minister of culture presented a plan against match fixing, on December 11, 2012.[9]

Police charged another two inhabitants of Sweden on December 12, 2012. Furthermore, the police dropped match fixing charges against a licensed agent (spillkommisjonær) of bookmaker Norsk Tipping due to insufficient evidence against the agent (who had been imprisoned for two weeks during the summer of 2012, while his shop was raided by police).[10]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.