Berlusconi said to pay off 'bunga bunga' witnesses

Bookmark and Share

ROME - An Italian court has accused ex-Premier Silvio Berlusconi and his lawyers of tampering with evidence by paying off witnesses in a trial related to his notorious 'bunga bunga' parties.


Citing testimony and telephone wiretaps, the Milan court said Berlusconi convened about a dozen young women to his Milan mansion on Jan. 15, 2011 to meet with his lawyers after the women's homes were searched as part of the police investigation into the parties.



Kensington Palace charity dinner, Dame Edna, Central African Republic, a 'horse whisperer' and more.


Anti-government forces are drawing support from universities where Islamists have deep roots.


Beijing responds to incursions by U.S., Japan and South Korea into disputed area.


Report: NSA allowed to spy in Toronto; Thailand's premier wins no-confidence vote but protests continue


Although it curbed Ukraine's enthusiasm for the E.U., Russia's foreign relations are under strain.


From then on, the judges wrote, the women began receiving 2,500 euros each month from Berlusconi and subsequently they offered unusually identical testimony in court denying that the parties had sexual overtones.


The court made the accusation in explaining its decision to convict three of Berlusconi's former associates of procuring girls to prostitute themselves at the parties.


Copyright 2013 news3blog.blogspot.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


{ 0 comments... Views All / Send Comment! }

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.