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Berlusconi draws year in wiretap case

MILAN, Italy, March 7 (UPI) -- Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi received a one-year prison sentence Thursday for his role in publishing material obtained by an illegal wiretap.

The wiretap was of a conversation in 2005 between one of then-Prime Minister Berlusconi's political opponents, Piero Fassino, head of the former center-left Democratic Left party, and Giovanni Consorte, the former chairman of insurance association Unipol, which has ties to the Democratic Left, the Italian ANSA news agency reported.

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At the time Unipol was close to taking over one of Italy's leading banks and Fassino, now mayor of Turin, was recorded as saying, "We have a bank."

The conversations were reported in Il Giornale, a conservative newspaper owned by Berlusconi's brother, Paolo Berlusconi, who was sentenced to 27 months in prison.

The court also ordered the Berlusconis to pay about $105,000 in damages to Fassino.

In Italy, prison sentences for non-violent crimes aren't enforced until the two-tier appeals system has been exhausted, ANSA said.

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