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SFA: Referee John Beaton and Family Under Police Protection After Online Leak

The Scottish FA confirmed referee John Beaton and his family are under police protection after personal details were leaked online following a controversial late penalty in Celtic's win over Motherwell. The SFA condemns threats against officials and calls for tolerance amid rising tensions.

·4 min read
John Beaton

John Beaton Under Police Surveillance Following Online Leak

John Beaton served as the referee at Fir Park on Wednesday evening.

The Scottish Football Association (SFA) announced that referee John Beaton and his family spent last night at home under police surveillance following a leak of personal details online. The SFA has called for tolerance and perspective to prevent any further, unthinkable escalation.

Beaton has faced criticism after awarding a late penalty, which was successfully converted, in Celtic's 3-2 victory over Motherwell on Wednesday. The incident at Fir Park, involving Video Assistant Referee (VAR) technology, was the latest in a series of contentious refereeing decisions amid the closing stages of the Scottish Premiership title race.

Celtic's win kept them within one point of league leaders Hearts. The two teams are set to meet at Celtic Park on Saturday in the final top-six fixture of the season.

"The Scottish FA condemns in the strongest possible terms attempts to compromise the safety of match officials,"
said the SFA, which oversees refereeing in the Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL).

"Such vigilantism, motivated by decisions perceived to be right or wrong on a field of play, is a scourge on our national game and we are grateful to Police Scotland for their swift intervention.
As we approach what should be an exciting finale to the season, we ask those who have personalised and hyperbolised their opinions, those who have sought the easy way out by attributing defeats to perceived refereeing errors, and those who have approved incendiary statements and posts to reflect on their contribution to creating an environment of intimidation, fear and alarm."

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'Hysterical Media Narrative'

The SFA identified parties they believe contributed to escalating tensions.

"We are also clear, sadly, that this is the inevitable consequence of the heightening criticism, intolerance and scapegoating demonstrated this season by media pundits, supporters, official supporters' groups, clubs, players, managers and former match officials,"
the SFA stated.

"We do not make that point lightly as the national association. Yet it is an inconvenient truth. Those who have sought to apportion blame and conspiracy towards match officials to deflect from defeats or perceived injustices throughout the season have contributed to an environment that puts the safety of our staff and match officials in jeopardy.
This is the consequence of a hysterical media narrative, fuelled by irresponsible knee-jerk post-match media interviews, commentary and official social media posts.
The cumulative effect impacts on our ability to provide enough referees to service our game at all levels. When it compromises the safety and wellbeing of our most senior match officials, enough is enough."

Related headlines include:

  • Everybody wants Hearts to win - Celtic boss O'Neill
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  • Has last-gasp Celtic penalty undermined Hearts' hopes?

The SFA emphasized that their officials "are not infallible".

"Mistakes will be made on the field, and subjective calls made in front of the VAR monitor, just as managers will pick the wrong team, goalkeepers concede soft goals and strikers miss from five yards out. Yet the reaction to these inevitabilities could not be more contrasting.
What happened yesterday is not an isolated incident. There are many examples of match officials being placed in harmful situations but with individuals fearful of speaking out lest it exacerbates the situation or causes further alarm to friends, family and colleagues.
We will not allow this to become the norm. We will not allow a situation where match officials require special provision to protect their children at school to be considered an occupational hazard. We will not allow a situation where staying at home with the front door locked and avoiding the hazards of public interaction becomes a coping strategy.
The Scottish FA will be seeking to strengthen its rules to better protect those integral to the game and urge those who will doubtless join us in condemning incidents like this to support those proposals, not contribute to their watering-down on the basis of self-preservation."

Celtic score controversial late penalty to set up epic final day

This article was sourced from bbc

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