Police file given to prosecutor over betting

SNOOKER: TWO SNOOKER stars were yesterday referred to prosecutors over betting patterns during a UK Championship match

SNOOKER:TWO SNOOKER stars were yesterday referred to prosecutors over betting patterns during a UK Championship match. Stephen Maguire (29) and Jamie Burnett (34) were referred to the procurator fiscal with three other men.

Strathclyde Police’s economic crime unit spent 17 months investigating claims linked to the result of a game between the two Scots in Telford on December 14th 2008.

The prosecution service at Hamilton will now decide whether charges should be brought.

The first-round match, which was subject to investigations by World Snooker and the Gambling Commission, was won 9-3 by Maguire.

READ MORE

Maguire, ranked number two in the world and seeded number three at the World Championship, which begins on Saturday, won the match after Burnett failed to pot a black ball that would have reduced his score to 8-4.

Before the match, World Snooker was contacted by bookmakers reporting suspicious betting patterns on the outcome.

They said there was heavy gambling on a 9-3 scoreline – provoking suspicion from bookmakers.

The pair were questioned by police in August last year but later released without charge. Both men strenuously denied any wrongdoing and have pledged to co-operate with any investigations.

A Strathclyde Police spokesman said: “Five males aged 35, 34, 31, 31 and 29 are the subject of a police report that is being submitted to the Procurator Fiscal at Hamilton.

“It is in relation to the alleged irregular betting patterns associated with the snooker match involving Jamie Burnett and Stephen Maguire at the Maplin UK Championship on December 14th, 2008.”

Maguire is from Glasgow and turned professional in 1998. He won two ranking titles in the 2007/08 season – the Northern Ireland Trophy and the China Open. Burnett, ranked 40th, lives in Hamilton, South Lanarkshire.

At the Crucible Maguire is scheduled for a first round with Stephen Lee, who is himself on police bail while West Midlands police continue inquiries into betting patterns at some of his matches.