Football: Soccer-Olympiakos chairman Marinakis to stand trial over sports violence case

ATHENS (Reuters) – Olympiakos chairman Evangelos Marinakis and four board members will stand trial on misdemeanour charges as part of a probe into sports violence, legal sources said on Thursday following a decision by a Greek judicial council.

Marinakis, a shipping and media tycoon who also owns English Premier League club Nottingham Forest, and the four board members have denied any wrongdoing, including an accusation of supporting a criminal organisation linked to Olympiakos fans.

“The accusation is totally baseless,” Marinakis’ lawyer Vassilis Dimakopoulos told Reuters. A trial date has yet to be set.

Authorities launched the probe after a riot police officer was fatally injured by a flare in clashes with a group of Olympiakos fans outside a volleyball game in December 2023. A separate trial is underway for the killing.

The volleyball match was between Olympiakos and Panathinaikos.

The judicial council also decided that more than 140 people, most of them fans of the Olympiakos sports club arrested since April, will stand trial on charges of participation in an alleged criminal organisation. The council decision follows a magistrate’s investigation.

Lawyers representing them say they have denied the accusations, as has Olympiakos football club.

Sport in Greece has been marred by violent incidents on and off the pitch in recent years and authorities have repeatedly promised to eliminate hooliganism.

Marinakis has accused the conservative government of interfering with the media and justice to protect its image. In a statement on Olympiakos’s website on Thursday, he said the real target was press freedom, democracy and his own media group.

“It is a coordinated, but desperate, effort to silence me,” he said.

A government spokesman responded that citizens were equal before justice, which is independent. (This story has been refiled to remove an incorrect reference to ownership of volleyball and football teams, in paragraph 5 )

(Reporting by Yannis Souliotis and Renee Maltezou; Editing by Toby Davis)