Chelsea captain John Terry's racism trial begins
LONDON (AP) -- The racism trial of Chelsea captain John Terry has begun with prosecutors claiming he acknowledges using offensive language as a "sarcastic exclamation" in response to taunts he allegedly had an affair.
The England defender is accused of racially abusing Queens Park Rangers defender Anton Ferdinand during a Premier League match in October.
Prosecutor Duncan Penny says the offensive language was uttered "in response to goading by Mr. Ferdinand on the issue of his extramarital affair."
Penny says Terry's defense is that he sarcastically repeated the words that Ferdinand mistakenly he had used.
Terry was stripped of the England captaincy before the 2010 World Cup following allegations he had an affair with a teammate's former girlfriend.
Terry was in Westminster Magistrates' Court on Monday.








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