MILAN, Feb 5 (Reuters) - A Milan court has rejected a
prosecution request to hear testimony from a former legal
adviser of Eni who has accused the company of spying on judges,
offering a boost to the Italian oil firm as it fights bribery
allegations over a Nigerian oil field.
The ruling removes the prospect of months of testimony
voicing allegations of wrongdoing by Eni and sets a timetable
for finally reaching a verdict in the long-running case.
The decision is the second piece of bad news in a few days
for Milan prosecutors after a witness last week refused to
confirm a key statement.
In one of the oil industry's biggest ever scandals, Italian
prosecutors allege Eni and Shell bought a
Nigeria oilfield in 2011 knowing most of the $1.3 billion
purchase price would go to agents and middlemen in bribes.
Eni and Shell have both denied any wrongdoing.
In a separate investigation, prosecutors allege Eni
officials sought to obstruct justice by discrediting key
prosecution witnesses in the main trial.
In that case, Piero Amara, a former legal adviser to Eni,
alleged company officials ordered information to be gathered on
prosecutors, board members and journalists to undermine them and
distract attention away from the main case.
Eni has categorically denied ever having set up any kind of
information-gathering operations and considers itself a victim
if any crime of obstruction were shown to have been committed.
Judges on Wednesday turned down a request by prosecutors to
call Amara as witness in the main OPL-245 trial on the grounds
such a move would not have any decisive effect on the trial.
The judges set a series of dates, starting on March 25, for
the prosecution to sum up its case and lay out its sentencing
requests for those involved.
Eni and Shell are being tried in Milan along with some of
their managers, including Eni Chief Executive Claudio Descalzi.
The managers have also denied wrongdoing.
(Reporting by Alfredo Faieta, Writing by Stephen Jewkes and
James Mackenzie; Editing by Mark Potter)