mendis wrote: ↑28 Feb 2024, 15:06
If the accuser goes to court with substantial evidence after Horner is cleared, then not just Horner, even Red Bull GmbH would be in trouble for incorrectly handling the case. As this is already being investigated by a Lawyer and if he/she doesn't find incriminating evidence, then accuser doesn't have a solid ground go to court. If the accuser somehow produces new evidence admissable in court, beyond what's originally used in this investigation, then it's a different story and law takes it's own course. If the accuser shuts the mouth by taking money, then they would obtain a clearance letter from the accuser, making it impossible to go court. It would then go down as someone harassing an upright man for the sake of money.
That's the concern for Red Bull Gmbh. Less so I imagine for Chalerm Yoovidhya(majority owner).
Yoovidhya though has form of making problems disappear for sums of cash according to Vice.
In 2012, the dead policeman’s brother signed a contract with the Yoovidhyas to receive 3 million baht ($96,600) in compensation. In exchange, his family agreed to not initiate criminal or civil charges over his brother’s death—though this didn’t shield them from a case brought by Thai prosecutors.
https://www.vice.com/en/article/pkgg87/ ... nd-killing
The complainant has been quoted by Telegraaf as having lawyers and ready for court action pending Red Bull's decision. The Telegraph also say they've seen the evidence. It's defamatory to suggest Horner offered a 600k pay off, if they have no evidence of it.
Is this a collusive effort between complainant and paper to fabricate allegations for money, or do they have evidence?
If the Barrister has found no wrongdoing in their report that will become evidence in a court, where an actual judge makes the decision, not the Barrister.
For the Yoovidhya side it's par for course, for RB GMbh it's catastrophe. No global company wants an embarrassing court case where the boss of a subsidiary is on trial. Not even after a supposedly neutral legal eagle investigates and then disappears on holiday for a over a week.
If Horner is absolved of wrongdoing when the facts come out, it should be goodnight Vienna for Telegraaf and the complainant. The telegraaf would know that too.