Tim Simona gets good behaviour bond

By Lisa Robinson / Roar Guru

Disgraced former Wests Tigers NRL player Tim Simona has been given an 18-month good behaviour bond for his “cruel hoax upon members of the community”.

The 25-year-old had pleaded guilty to dishonestly obtaining property by deception after pocketing money from the sale of signed club jerseys that were purportedly auctioned for the Camp Quality children’s charity.

At the Campbelltown Local Court on Tuesday, Simona’s lawyer asked that there be no conviction recorded but Magistrate Ian Guy rejected that argument because the matter was “not trivial”.

“It wasn’t a single event – best estimate is somewhere between 10 to 15 occasions and the plan involved you obtaining goods, buying them … from rugby league headquarters and then putting them on social media for auction,” he said.

The magistrate said “unsuspecting” people thought their money was going to a good cause.

“Little did they realise they were benefiting you.

“It was a cruel hoax upon members of the community.”

Simona was deregistered from the NRL in March after admitting to placing bets on more than 60 games in 2016.

He has since revealed he had a cocaine addiction which developed during his time at the NRL club.

The court heard every dollar has now been paid back to Camp Quality and Simona deeply regretted his action and “accepts accountability”.

He now has two jobs – including working as a personal trainer – that earns him about $600 net per week.

Mr Guy accepted there’d been consequences through the loss of employment with the NRL but said it was “speculation” a criminal conviction would affect his future rugby career in Australia and overseas.

He gave Simona a good behaviour bond which requires him to “stay out of trouble” for 18 months.

The Crowd Says:

2017-07-12T09:02:42+00:00

TigerMike

Guest


He got off light 1 ripping off people who thought they were giving to charities 10-15 times 2 ripping off charities stealing their donations 10-15 times 3 ripping off the Tigers by throwng games 50-60 times

2017-07-11T15:15:00+00:00

Roger Ramjet

Guest


His Career is done and dusted as they say- No one will ever sign him again League/Union or Tiddlywinks. Ripping of Charities was bad enough but betting against his team - How could he ever be trusted again.

2017-07-11T07:10:41+00:00

terrence

Guest


Exactly right VH, considering the amount involved, the fact he has shown attrition by paying the charity the money owed and accepting responsibility for his actions, as well as the impact on his (former) career and character, this sentence for the is more than fair. Hopefully the NRL or another professional sport may consider his registration in a year or two (he did the crime and accepted the punishment, he deserves another chance).

2017-07-11T04:43:21+00:00

Magnus M. Østergaard

Roar Guru


Do you even know what the usual punishment is?

2017-07-11T04:14:24+00:00

E-Meter

Guest


Good old celebrity/sportsperson justice. An average punter diddling a charity would have copped plenty. But an ex- footballer gets a good behaviour bond. Unbelievable.

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