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Police drop Clattenburg ‘racism’ case

Sport
LONDON - British police said on Tuesday they had no plans to continue enquiries into a complaint regarding alleged racist comments by referee Mark Clattenburg towards a Chelsea player because no victim had come forward

LONDON – British police said on Tuesday they had no plans to continue enquiries into a complaint regarding alleged racist comments by referee Mark Clattenburg towards a Chelsea player because no victim had come forward.

Report by Supersport

The Society of Black Lawyers reported Clattenburg to London’s Metropolitan Police after Chelsea complained to the Football Association the referee

used a term understood to have been interpreted as racist towards John Obi Mikel during the 3-2 Premier League defeat by Manchester United on October 28.

While the separate FA enquiry is continuing, a police statement said from their perspective “the matter cannot currently be investigated”.

“An investigation was launched into alleged comments made during a football match between Chelsea FC and Manchester United FC at Stamford Bridge on 28 October 2012,” the statement said.

“This follows on from a complaint received by the Metropolitan Police Service on October 29.

“Enquiries were made and no victims have come forward. The matter will remain as a recorded incident.

“Without a victim and/or any evidence that any offence has been committed, the matter cannot currently be investigated.”

However, the statement added police could look again at the incident.

“If the situation changes and a victim and/or evidence to support an allegation of a crime comes to police attention then further enquiries will, if appropriate, be made,” it read.

Before the police made their announcement, Chelsea chairman Bruce Buck gave an interview to Tuesday’s London Evening Standard in which he insisted the European champions were not hypocrites for backing captain John Terry, while lodging a complaint against Clattenburg.

It was announced on Monday that Clattenburg would miss another round of Premier League matches – the third successive weekend since Chelsea made their complaint that football chiefs have felt it best to keep the 37-year-old official out of the firing line.

Reports in the British Press indicated the FA’s enquiries into his alleged comments to Mikel could be concluded by the end of this week.