ArtK78, on Oct 16 2009, 01:52 PM, said:
I mentioned earlier in this thread that I find it worthy of note that the principals being accused have not refuted the allegations. While one poster addressed this by stating that "a dignified silence is the best anybody can manage, in such trying circumstances," I find that argument to be ingenuous. And, while that same poster, paraphrasing Terence Reese, stated that it is impossible to prove that one is not cheating, that is not what I am looking for. I don't need proof that the accused are not cheating. But, at the very least, I need a denial from the accused. I have seen none. So, while it may very well be true that the accused are innocent until proven guilty, the lack of a denial of guilt can be very telling.
You are welcome to quote me by name, ArtK78
In several cases of alleged cheating, players have protested their innocence but convincing evidence has been presented, resulting in bans and a cleaner game (eg screens).
But there still seems to be no effective investigation protocol. In the
Reese-Schapiro case, the American team did not report the alleged cheats. Instead, they drafted their own observers who were told the putative code. A witness for the prosecution chaired the WBF committee to consider the cheating allegations. The committee members included interested parties who should have recused themselves. R-S were not told the charges beforehand, had no opportunity to examine evidence, cross-examine prosecution witnesses, or call witnesses of their own. The Foster-Bourne enquiry remedied some of these deficiencies but the WBF reversed its findings.
The current vilification campaign against the
Blue-Team seems just as unfair. So far the accusations are vague and the evidence nebulous. Hence they are almost impossible to
refute. Furthermore, top US players have made many cheating allegations over more than fifty years. It would be demeaning, pointless, and tedious to
deny every one of them. ArtK78 calls my argument
ingenous but I don't understand why
In the
Blue-Team case, there are two items that could be produced
now, and might plug the evidential gap.
- Leandro Burgay's tapes. Wolff could publish an accurate transcript (The CIA might be a fairly reliable source). If the Italian Bridge Federation disputed the authenticity of the transcript, they could correct it from the original tapes that were consigned to their safe-keeping.
- Jaime Ortiz Patiño's minutes (or contemporaneous notes or whatever) of
- The WBF ban on the Blue-Team from International competition.
- WBF decisions to relax that ban in several subsequent years.
My guess, however, is that we may have a long wait