M.I.A has defended her decision to wear the kit, claiming it was in support for victims of the Paris terror attacks in November.
PSG claim that by wearing the jersey, on which the sponsor's name has been changed from (Dubai-based airline) "Fly Emirates" to "Fly Pirates", M.I.A has acted with "economic prejudice" and "image prejudice" towards the club.
"By causing us an image prejudice, you have unduly taken advantage from the considerable reputation of our club," reads the letter.
"Your actions are thus the source of both an economic prejudice and an image prejudice for which you may be held liable under Article 1382 of the French civil code."
The club requested that M.I.A "cease the broadcast of images on any media which show the Paris Saint-Germain jersey" within 24 hours of the letter being received.
But with the letter clearly stamped as being received on 21 December 2015, their request has not been met by M.I.A or her management.
The letter ends with the suggestion that PSG could pursue legal action against M.I.A in the event that their request isn't met:
"We reserve the right to seek all remedies available to law to compensate the prejudice already suffered and that to come, and we reserve the right to start any procedure, including judicial ones, if needs be, to protect our interests."
There was a time (not too long ago) when the 49ers reigned supreme.
We had a great coach, a quarterback we could trust (well... almost trust) and the wins we're piling up so fast we almost didn't know what to do with our hands. Then, the unthinkable happened. Our coach was FIRED (yeah, this lovable guy), our most valuable players retired or were traded to other teams and thus begun the most epic implosion in recent NFL history!
Fans were angry even celebrities felt the need to voice their frustration. Things were so bad this season even fictitious characters rose from their fictional graves to put in their two cents!
But enough from me. Let's see what Bane thinks about all this!
Former St. Louis Cardinals director of scouting Chris Correa will plead guilty to five charges related to accessing scouting data on the Houston Astros' database, the Wall Street Journal reports. Correa will face 12 total charges related to the hacking.
Correa was fired by the Cardinals in July after the FBI announced it would investigate the team for accessing the Astros' scouting database.
Astros General Manager Jeff Luhnow formerly worked for the Cardinals' analytics department, and established the database the team uses for scouting and drafting. He took his position with the Astros in 2011. Correa worked under Luhnow with the Cardinals from 2009 to Luhnow's departure.
Luhnow created a similar scouting database in Houston. Correa became suspicious that the Astros were accessing the Cardinals database created by Luhnow. In July, the St. Louis Dispatchreported the events as follows:
The source said that Correa's involvement in the hacking began in 2013, in an attempt to determine whether Luhnow or any other former Cardinals employees took proprietary data to the Astros.
Correa's suspicions were aroused in part by a résumé in which a job seeker claimed expertise that Correa believed could have come only from working with Cardinals data, the source said.
He used an old password from a former Cardinals employee working for the Astros to access the Houston database "a few" times but did not download data, the source said. The source claims Correa located some data on the website, but did not report it to his bosses because the information was outdated and unreliable without being redone.
The source said that others must have accessed Houston's database if federal investigators' claims about the number of hacking attempts are correct.
MLB is expected to release a statement on Correa's alleged guilty pleas.