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OT: Match Fixing

Gronk

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77,720
I think this deserves a new thread.

The telecrap have a new plaything.

CkLyBtOUYAQU_9e.jpg
 

Gronk

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77,720
FREE sex, free drugs and free betting — that’s how police say NRL stars are being lured into the murky criminal underworld.

In the wake of this week’s revelations about investigations into NRL match-fixing, The Sunday Telegraph can reveal the infiltration techniques police believe are used by some organised criminals to entrap players from across the league and then blackmail them into rigging matches.

Detective Inspector Wayne Walpole, in charge of stopping organised crime from infiltrating sport, said these techniques were well known to police.


Drugs such as cocaine can be used by criminals to compromise players’ integrity.
“The ‘honey-pot’ (situation) is where a player is set up with Miss World,” Insp Walpole said.

“All of a sudden there is a heap of photos, video and the player might be a married person. All of a sudden they are compromised (and criminals will threaten) that they will show photos to wives, girlfriends.”

In exchange for keeping these pictures away from the public, the player will be made to help fix matches.

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“The same principle applies with the other “freebies”.

“It’s not just with the ‘honey-pot’,” Insp Walpole said.


“It could be a drug issue where someone has supplied them a recreational drug for a night and (the player) takes their gamble with the drug-testing laws and. of course. the person who supplied that drug has the player compromised. Compromise can happen in any numerous ways.

“He may not even realise they are doing it. Obviously they don’t at first — then it becomes too late.”

It is far removed from days of the past where criminal figures would rip one-off payments from players.


The company of women is a common ploy to try to sway footballers.
Now they are using the leverage to win big on gambling on matches, generally online on overseas websites.

Infiltration is not restricted to drugs and sex. Even hospital visits to sick children can be used.

“The bikies are great at it,” Insp Walpole said.

“They’ll have charity runs where some of them will sell as much gear as they can but they will have a cheque for a thousand dollars ready to give to the kids’ hospital.

“They will invite sportsmen along to throw a ball to the kids but it’s all about slowly forming that relationship.

“Sport and gambling is a billion-dollar industry.

“Couple them together, don’t think *organised crime is going to sit on the sidelines and just watch and clap.

“(We had) photographic information that high-*ranking members of the Comancheros had supplied brand new iPhones to a jockey and a trainer they didn’t know.”

“Because you have exotic sports betting now, (they say) ‘we don’t want money from you but you need to do this in a particular game’.”

One NRL club has blamed the signing of a high-profile league identity to their training group for not only bringing a wealth of knowledge but also links to people connected with the criminal underworld.

Some players are believed to have quickly developed the same links.

High-stakes gambling is not a new thing for the NRL, with many players legendary for their love of the punt.

One player was spotted recently losing $14,000 on greyhound races, punting at a pub, while a retired NRL player witnessed another player laying bets of $10,000 and $15,000 at a time on various race meetings.

But it is the links that players can develop from such big wagering that has authorities increasingly worried.


The racing industry is a common target of criminals seeking to compromise stakeholders.
Free meals and accommodation are also part of plans to entice players into the criminal world.

“(Players) have to look at why people are forming these relationships,” Insp Walpole said. “When they don’t know them, why are they buying them a meal? Why are they buying them a drink? Is it a motel room?

“We know players who have been set up with prostitutes in the past and have been filmed. We know they have been given recreational drugs so they’ve been compromised.

“We know that and we talk to the governing bodies about that.”

The problem is widespread and not restricted to rugby league, despite Insp Walpole’s Organised Crime Squad investigating match-fixing in the NRL.

Horse racing has also had its problems.

“There was a jockey,” Insp Walpole said.

“(We had) photographic information that high-*ranking members of the Comancheros had supplied brand new iPhones to a jockey and a trainer they didn’t know. He didn’t know them.

“I spoke to the jockey myself and said: ‘Why do you think they gave you an iPhone?’

“That was an attempt at infiltration without a doubt.

“Blind Freddy would recognise that.

“They were convicted criminals, and high-ranking members of an outlaw motorcycle gang, through a third party, were able to meet a couple of jockeys and a trainer and able to supply a number of brand-new phones for no apparent reason.

“That’s just the slow process of infiltration.”
http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/ne...s/news-story/9c6b833194f772dd3d3e96661d0e01e8
 

phantom eel

First Grade
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6,327
One NRL club has blamed the signing of a high-profile league identity to their training group for not only bringing a wealth of knowledge but also links to people connected with the criminal underworld.
:shock:
 

Bigfella

Coach
Messages
10,102
i love the irony of the telegraph's concern about players being set up with prostitutes and dugs.

Shane Warne Ian Botham Mike Gatting and countless others say Hi Rupert. Organised crime gangs have nothing on News Corp.
 

Last Week

Bench
Messages
3,726
i love the irony of the telegraph's concern about players being set up with prostitutes and dugs.

Shane Warne Ian Botham Mike Gatting and countless others say Hi Rupert. Organised crime gangs have nothing on News Corp.

True, but as unethical as News Corp are, they don't commit the crimes that outlaw motorcycle gangs do.
 

Snoochies

First Grade
Messages
5,634
“It could be a drug issue where someone has supplied them a recreational drug for a night and (the player) takes their gamble with the drug-testing laws and. of course. the person who supplied that drug has the player compromised. Compromise can happen in any numerous ways.

“He may not even realise they are doing it. Obviously they don’t at first — then it becomes too late.”

Or when a player is caught with said drugs and 'the other person' takes the wrap and says "they're mine". The player is now indebted to 'the other person'.
 

Gronk

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Eddie Hayson and his links to Kieran Foran, Brett Stewart, Anthony Watmough and Andrew Johns

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Kieran Foran, in blue T-shirt, cap and sunglasses, directly in front of Eddie Hasyon, at the Gosford Races on Anzac Day this year. Photo: Supplied

It was the white shoes adorned with little devil's horns that caught the punter's attention at the Gosford races on Anzac Day.
But it was even more of a surprise when he recognised the wearer was the huge gambler and one-time brothel owner Eddie Hayson, and that his companions in the betting ring were none other than rugby league star Kieran Foran and Foran's brother Liam.
For years, club officials at Manly have been concerned about Mr Hayson's close friendship with key players such as Brett Stewart and Foran, who switched from Manly to Parramatta this season.
In January last year, Mr Hayson, Stewart and two other men were spotted holidaying in Las Vegas at the Aria Resort and Casino, a luxurious five-star hotel.
Apart from their overseas jaunt, "Eddie Everywhere", as Mr Hayson is referred to by club officials, was frequently spotted at various Manly hotels enjoying a punt with Foran, Stewart, recently retired player Anthony Watmough and former league great Andrew Johns.
Johns had been on Manly's coaching staff for several years but his contract was not renewed this year after new coach Trent Barrett, a former Australian player, decided to go in a different direction.
This may not have been of concern to officials except that Hayson is no small-time punter. The chronic gambler has been banned from Star casino and, in February, was banned from betting with the TAB.
Mr Hayson was also seen with Foran in Brisbane last month, the day after Foran's TAB account registered $75,000 worth of bets in a two-hour period.
One person previously involved with Mr Hayson said it was easy to be drawn into betting beyond your means. "You might start off with $5 bets but you ended up making $5000 bets on information Eddie claimed to have received from this trainer or that jockey," he claimed.
Manly officials were more concerned about what information Mr Hayson's friendships with the players might produce. "He liked to put himself in the position of having inside information about what's taking place," said a former club official.
The former official said a feud developed between then coach Geoff Toovey and the Foran/Stewart group of players after Stewart's brother Glenn did not have his contract renewed.
The official speculated that Mr Hayson might have used knowledge of the players' discontent with Toovey to his own advantage.
In 2006, Mr Hayson and fellow punter Steve Fletcher won an estimated $2 million on a betting plunge after allegedly receiving inside information that then Newcastle Knights star Andrew Johns would not be playing due to injury.
At the time, Mr Hayson owned racehorses with Johns and his brother Matthew. A subsequent NRL investigation found nothing amiss.
Fairfax Media is not suggesting that any of the players mentioned above have been involved in any wrongdoing.
Inside information is everything when it comes to gambling. Senior police officers, while not referring to Mr Hayson, have expressed concern about the risks of organised crime figures infiltrating sport through associations with players.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...drew-johns-20160603-gpbcob.html#ixzz4AjvzGOyS
Follow us: @smh on Twitter | sydneymorningherald on Facebook
 

IFR33K

Coach
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I guess it will be a very interesting month or two as the investigation progresses.

One thing I'm sure that hasn't been mentioned. If Foran was in QLD for rehab, why was he seen out at night with this Hayson character??? Isn't he in rehab for depression? Surely if he was fit enough to go to popular night spots, he should of been fit enough to remain in Sydney and train. Or am I missing something??
 

emjaycee

Coach
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13,853
I guess it will be a very interesting month or two as the investigation progresses.

One thing I'm sure that hasn't been mentioned. If Foran was in QLD for rehab, why was he seen out at night with this Hayson character??? Isn't he in rehab for depression? Surely if he was fit enough to go to popular night spots, he should of been fit enough to remain in Sydney and train. Or am I missing something??

I don't think there has been any details released of Foran's rehab process has there?
Was he in lock-down? Rehab doesn't mean prison and it wasn't as if it was a court enforced rehab program.

For all we know he was in Brisbane, staying in a hotel/motel 3 blocks away from the clinic where he was being treated as a day patient and seeing his counsellor on a regular basis. This would be classed as rehab so there is no reason why he couldn't be out at night, at breakfast, or at any other time for that matter. His 'rehab' allowed him to come down to Sydney and train and play against the Storm before planning to head back up there for more treatment.
 

IFR33K

Coach
Messages
17,043
I don't think there has been any details released of Foran's rehab process has there?
Was he in lock-down? Rehab doesn't mean prison and it wasn't as if it was a court enforced rehab program.

For all we know he was in Brisbane, staying in a hotel/motel 3 blocks away from the clinic where he was being treated as a day patient and seeing his counsellor on a regular basis. This would be classed as rehab so there is no reason why he couldn't be out at night, at breakfast, or at any other time for that matter. His 'rehab' allowed him to come down to Sydney and train and play against the Storm before planning to head back up there for more treatment.

No doubt. But surely hanging around with this character Hayson would be a big no no? If Foran needs help to get his head right I understand that. But surely he must help himself before others can do so. If this character is such bad news, wouldn't that defeat the purpose of attempting to sort yourself out?
 

Chipmunk

Coach
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17,379
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/rugby-league/...drew-johns-20160603-gpbcob.html#ixzz4AjvzGOyS
Follow us: @smh on Twitter | sydneymorningherald on Facebook

Mr Hayson was also seen with Foran in Brisbane last month, the day after Foran's TAB account registered $75,000 worth of bets in a two-hour period.

I have to ask the first question here. How was Foran in Brisbane, the day after his $75,000 bets from his TAB Account, when there is video evidence of Foran training with Parra on the same day?

Did Foran fly from Brisbane on the Thursday, train with the team, then head back to Brisbane that day, then fly back sometime over the weekend, train again, then play on Monday??? I'd suggest this is unlikely.
 
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42,876
Surely players on big coin are smart enough to pay someone to have plastic surgery to look like them, for use should they ever be compromised? I know it's the first thing I'd do.
 

eels81236

Bench
Messages
3,643
I guess it will be a very interesting month or two as the investigation progresses.

One thing I'm sure that hasn't been mentioned. If Foran was in QLD for rehab, why was he seen out at night with this Hayson character??? Isn't he in rehab for depression? Surely if he was fit enough to go to popular night spots, he should of been fit enough to remain in Sydney and train. Or am I missing something??

He was rumoured to be on the cans at Terrigal for part of his rehab stint. ;-)
 

Gronk

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NRL match fixing: NSW Police won't approach Manly Sea Eagles to accelerate investigation
Updated 20 minutes ago

Manly's calls for the NSW Police to accelerate their probe into the match-fixing scandal has fallen on deaf ears, with the Deputy Commissioner suggesting they will approach the NRL club in their own time.

Sea Eagles chief executive Joe Kelly fronted the media on Friday night to call for the police to bring forward any evidence of match-fixing before further damage is done to the club.

But Deputy Commissioner Catherine Burn said the organised crime squad would not be rushed into completing what is expected to be a thorough process.

"There is no task force at present but we have the best organised crime detectives conducting their own investigation and I am confident that if there is evidence of fixing matches, we will find the perpetrators," Burn told News Corp.

"They are in the early stages of the investigation and will not go to Manly until they need answers that will come from the club."

Manly is infuriated that its losses to South Sydney and Parramatta last season are reported as being under the microscope.

The Sea Eagles reiterated over the weekend that they had yet to be contacted by police, and the only suggestion that their matches were being looked at had come from media sources.

"This unfounded speculation is causing our game an awful lot of distress at the moment - not only our game but our club in particular," Kelly said on Friday night.

"This proud and successful community-based club is really hurting.

"What we'd like to do is really urge the authorities to go very quickly and as soon as possible bring evidence forward - if there is evidence."

AAP
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-06-...-nrl-match-fixing-probe/7483890?section=sport
 

ash411

Bench
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3,411

...in other words...

Manly: Just get on with it already..
Police: You'll sit there and take your media bashing and like it.
Manly: But we don't wanna...
Police: Tough, you're scheduled for the next 5 front pages, so we won't be releasing any new information until that's done.
Manly: Why?
Police: Cause then there'll be facts, and you know how the media hates facts..
Manly: awww.. c'mon..
Police: Nah, sorry, the DT has more money and political pull than you.
 

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