Monday, January 25, 2016

Court has ruled that bribes of €100 are not big enough to be deemed as corruption

Italy’s top court has ruled that a drunk driver did absolutely nothing wrong when he tried to bribe a police officer.

The Court of Cassation acquitted the man of corruption – because the €100 (£75, $108) he offered the official to avoid being convicted of drunk driving was too small. Bribes of €100 are not big enough to be deemed as corruption, the court ruled.



The court also said that due to the man’s state of drunkenness, he was not of “sound mind” when he offered the police officer money to turn a blind eye. For a bribery attempt to be classified as corruption, Italian law states: "It is neccesary that the offer is made with approprate seriousness,” and also “that the attempt is able to psychologically unsettle the public official".

In light of the man's inebriated state, and the small sum being offered, the court ruling stated that the case does not constitute corruption and that the "charge should be cancelled without delay". But even though he escaped a bribery conviction, the man has not avoided a conviction for driving under the influence of alcohol, which in Italy carries a fine of between €500 and €6,200, a licence ban of between six and 12 months, and six to 12 months in prison – depending on the driver’s level of intoxication.

1 comment:

Ratz said...

I may be misremembering, but didn't Italy vote for someone who was later charged of bribery, sex with the under age, corruption and so forth? Only to have him voted back in a couple of years later? Guess they're normalising and it's business as ususal