Reprieve for Berlusconi
Reuters reports that an Italian judge has delayed the resumption of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s tax fraud trial until January, at least. Why? "Pressing state business" — that is, presiding over a U.N. summit on hunger in Rome. But Berlusconi has not managed to delay the other criminal case pending against him and is due ...
Reuters reports that an Italian judge has delayed the resumption of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's tax fraud trial until January, at least. Why? "Pressing state business" -- that is, presiding over a U.N. summit on hunger in Rome.
Reuters reports that an Italian judge has delayed the resumption of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s tax fraud trial until January, at least. Why? "Pressing state business" — that is, presiding over a U.N. summit on hunger in Rome.
But Berlusconi has not managed to delay the other criminal case pending against him and is due in court later in November. The magnate/bon vivant/political leader allegedly paid a prominent British lawyer $600,000 to testify falsely on his behalf in a 1997 corruption case. (David Mills, who accepted the bribe, has already been convicted and is currently appealing his jail sentence.)
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