Judges in Turkey's major match-fixing case face probe

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The country's top judicial body, the Supreme Council of Judges and Prosecutors (HSYK), has launched an investigation into judges in the July 2011 match-fixing case, which shook Turkey's football scene.

The investigation was launched on April 13 into the former head of 16th Court of Serious Crimes and Bak?rköy judge Mehmet Ekinci, Van judge Hikmet ?en and Istanbul judge Bülent K?nay, who are former members of the court.

Upon a complaint by Fenerbahçe Chairman Aziz Y?ld?r?m's lawyer, the 1st Chamber of the HSYK, which examined the allegations on Ekinci, ?en and K?nay, decided to open an investigation into the allegations.

The decision was sent to Justice Minister Bekir Bozda?, who is also the council head, for approval.

The head of the court and members in the match-fixing case did not provide records of the original hearing recorded via visual, audial and technical tools to the defendants, forcing the lawyers for the defendants to obtain the aforementioned records during the Court of Cassation's examination of the appeal, the bill of complaint alleged.

The judges allegedly created a fake hearing record by not including the defendants' and their lawyers' verbal defenses in some records, excessively using the "copy-paste" method and including statements that the defendants and their lawyers did not actually make.

An investigation into the match-fixing claims was opened on July 3, 2011. Y?ld?r?m was first sentenced to jail in 2012 and fined 1.3 million Turkish Liras ($560,000) for forming a criminal gang and engaging in match-fixing during the 2010-2011 season. He served around one year behind bars before being freed pending a retrial.

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