An Italian court accused
ex-Premier Silvio Berlusconi and his lawyers on Friday of tampering with
evidence by paying off witnesses in a trial related to his notorious
"bunga bunga" parties.
It sent its documentation to prosecutors
to investigate the possible corruption of a judicial process.
Berlusconi's lawyers immediately rejected the accusation and said they
expected prosecutors would drop the case.
If prosecutors go
ahead, the accusation in the court's ruling would lead to a new legal
headache for Berlusconi, who this week was kicked out of Parliament for
at least six years because of another, unrelated problem: a tax fraud
conviction.
The court suggested that Berlusconi paid off the
would-be show girls who attended his dinner parties to downplay the
sexually charged nature of the evenings when they testified. He did so,
the judges suggested, because he was facing related charges in another
case involving accusations he paid for sex with an underage prostitute
who was also a "bunga bunga" guest.
Citing testimony and
telephone wiretaps, the Milan court said Berlusconi convened about a
dozen of these young women to come to his Milan mansion on Jan. 15, 2011
to meet with his lawyers. They were summoned after the women's homes
were searched as part of the police investigation into the parties.
From
then on, the judges wrote, the women began receiving 2,500 euros
($3,400) apiece each month from Berlusconi and subsequently they offered
nearly identical testimony in court denying that the dinner parties had
sexual overtones. The amount is about twice what an average worker in
Italy earns a month.
The court made the accusation in
explaining its July 19 decision to convict three of Berlusconi's former
associates of procuring girls to prostitute themselves at the parties.
Berlusconi wasn't a defendant in the trial. He was convicted
in a separate trial of paying for sex with 17-year-old Moroccan girl,
Karima el-Mahroug, better known as Ruby, who attended the parties, and
then trying to cover it up. Berlusconi's lawyers have said they would
appeal the verdict, seven-year prison term and a lifetime political ban.
Berlusconi has defended the payments to the girls, saying it
is simply his nature to try to help people in need. Most of the women
were aspiring show girls hoping to get a break on one of Berlusconi's
Mediaset television programs. Many lived in apartments owned by
Berlusconi, wore jewelry that were gifts from him and some drove cars
that he gave them for their birthdays.
In a statement Friday,
Berlusconi attorneys Niccolo Ghedini and Piero Longo said there was "no
connection whatsoever" between the January 2011 meeting and the
payments the girls received, which the lawyers said only began in March
of the following year.
The evidence tampering accusations,
they said in a statement carried by the LaPresse news agency, "are
completely disconnected from reality and factual substantiation." They
predicted that prosecutors, who had all this evidence in their
possession earlier and didn't press charges, would drop the case.
In
its decision, the judges wrote that the girls gave "overlapping"
testimony that contradicted testimony given by other participants in the
parties who described sexually charged evenings where girls ended up in
their underwear or dressed like nuns, dancing for Berlusconi and
letting him touch them.
"All the people who received this
amount of money gave declarations at trial that were perfectly
overlapping, even in the use of language that was incongruent with their
cultural background," the judges wrote. "In particular, there was a
repetition of names, terms and phrases that the witnesses, when asked,
said they didn't know the meaning of the word or phrase that they had
used."
"These were declarations that were directed in favor of Berlusconi," the judges wrote.
The
judges said it wasn't merely an anomaly that Berlusconi was paying
monthly stipends to witnesses testifying in a trial in which he was
indirectly implicated. "It's an illegal act: Tampering with evidence."
In saying they had forwarded all the trial documentation to
prosecutors, the judges accused Berlusconi of making the payments, and
two of his lawyers of participating in the Jan. 15, 2011 meeting. The
judges accused the women of giving false testimony.
source:mercurynews.com
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