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US Government to extradite FIFA officials on corruption charges

whall15

Coach
Messages
15,871
ZURICH — Swiss authorities conducted an extraordinary early-morning operation here Wednesday to arrest several top soccer officials and extradite them to the United States on federal corruption charges.


As leaders of FIFA, soccer’s global governing body, gathered for their annual meeting, more than a dozen plain-clothed Swiss law enforcement officials arrived unannounced at the Baur au Lac hotel, an elegant five-star property with views of the Alps and Lake Zurich. They went to the front desk to get keys and proceeded upstairs to the rooms.


The arrests were carried out peacefully, with at least two men being ushered out of the hotel without handcuffs. One FIFA official, Eduardo Li of Costa Rica, was led by the authorities from his room to a side-door exit of the hotel. He was allowed to bring his luggage, which was adorned with FIFA logos.


The charges allege widespread corruption in FIFA over the past two decades, involving bids for World Cups as well as marketing and broadcast deals, according to three law enforcement officials with direct knowledge of the case. The charges include wire fraud, racketeering and money laundering, and officials said they targeted members of FIFA’s powerful executive committee, which wields enormous power and does its business largely in secret.

The arrests were a startling blow to FIFA, a multibillion-dollar organization that governs the world’s most popular sport but has been plagued by accusations of bribery for decades.


The inquiry is also a major threat to Sepp Blatter, FIFA’s longtime president who is generally recognized as the most powerful person in sports, though he was not charged. An election, seemingly pre-ordained to give him a fifth term as president, is scheduled for Friday.


Prosecutors planned to unseal an indictment against more than 10 officials, not all of whom are in Zurich, law enforcement officials said. Among them are Jeffrey Webb of the Cayman Islands, a vice president of the executive committee; Eugenio Figueredo of Uruguay, who is also an executive committee vice president and until recently was the president of South America’s soccer association; and Jack Warner of Trinidad and Tobago, a former member of the executive committee who has been accused of numerous ethical violations.

“We’re struck by just how long this went on for and how it touched nearly every part of what FIFA did,” said a law enforcement official. “It just seemed to permeate every element of the federation and was just their way of doing business. It seems like this corruption was institutionalized.”
The Justice Department, the F.B.I. and FIFA did not have any immediate comment.


The case is the most significant yet for United States Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch, who took office last month. She previously served as the United States attorney in Brooklyn, where she supervised the FIFA investigation. Ms. Lynch and F.B.I. Director James Comey were expected to hold a news conference on Wednesday morning in New York.

With more than $1.5 billion in reserves, FIFA is as much a global financial conglomerate as a sports organization. With countries around the world competing aggressively to win the bid to host the World Cup, Mr. Blatter has commanded the fealty of anyone who wanted a piece of that revenue stream. He and FIFA have weathered corruption controversies in the past, but none involved charges of federal crimes in United States court.


United States law gives the Justice Department wide authority to bring cases against foreign nationals living abroad, an authority that prosecutors have used repeatedly in international terrorism cases. Those cases can hinge on the slightest connection to the United States, like the use of an American bank or Internet service provider.


Switzerland’s treaty with the United States is unusual in that it gives Swiss authorities the power to refuse extradition for tax crimes, but on matters of general criminal law, the Swiss have agreed to turn people over for prosecution in American courts.

The case further mars the reputation of FIFA’s leader, Mr. Blatter, who has for years acted as a de facto head of state. Politicians, star players, national soccer officials and global corporations that want their brands attached to the sport have long genuflected before him.


Critics of FIFA point to the lack of transparency regarding executive salaries and resource allocations for an organization that, by its own admission, had revenue of $5.7 billion from 2011 to 2014. Policy decisions are also often taken without debate or explanation, and a small group of officials — known as the executive committee — operates with outsize power. FIFA has for years operated with little oversight and even less transparency. Alexandra Wrage, a governance consultant who once unsuccessfully attempted to help overhaul FIFA’s methods, famously labeled the organization “byzantine and impenetrable.”

Law enforcement officials said much of the inquiry involves Concacaf, one of the six regional confederations that compose FIFA. Concacaf — which stands for Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football — includes major countries like the United States and Mexico, and also tiny ones like Barbados and Montserrat.

Concacaf was led from 1990 to 2011 by Mr. Warner, the longtime head of Trinidad & Tobago’s federation. A key powerbroker in FIFA’s governing executive committee, Mr. Warner had been dogged by accusations of corruption. He was accused of illegally profiting from the resale of tickets to the 2006 World Cup, and of withholding the bonuses of the Trinidad players who participated in that tournament.


Mr. Warner resigned his positions in FIFA, Concacaf and his national association in 2011 amid mounting evidence that he had been part of an attempt to buy the votes of Caribbean federation officials in the 2010 FIFA presidential election. A 2013 Concacaf report also found that he had received tens of millions of dollars in misappropriated funds.


But according to the rules of FIFA at the time, Mr. Warner’s resignation led to the immediate closure of all ethics committee cases against him. “The presumption of innocence is maintained,” FIFA said in a short statement announcing his departure.


No recent incident better encapsulated FIFA’s unusual power dynamic than the bidding for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments, which many observers found to be flawed from the start: the decision to award two tournaments at once, critics said, would invite vote-trading and other inducements.


Since only the 24 members of the executive committee would decide on the hosts, persuading even a few of them might be enough to swing the vote. Even before the vote took place, two committee members — Amos Adamu of Nigeria and Reynald Temarii of Tahiti — were suspended after an investigation by The Sunday Times caught both men on tape asking for payments in exchange for their support. It was later revealed by England’s bid chief that four ExCo members had solicited bribes from him for their votes; one asked for $2.5 million, while another, Nicolas Leoz of Paraguay, requested a knighthood.


As new accounts of bribery continued to emerge — a whistleblower who worked for the Qatar bid team claimed that several African officials were paid $1.5 million each to support Qatar — FIFA in 2012 started an investigation of the bid process. It was led by a former United States attorney, Michael J. Garcia, who spent nearly two years compiling a report.



That report, however, has never been made public; instead, the top judge on the ethics committee, the German Joachim Eckert, released a summary of the report. In it, he declared that while violations of the code of ethics had occurred, they had not affected the integrity of the vote.


Within hours, Garcia had criticised Eckert’s summary as incorrect and incomplete, charging that it contained “numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts.” Nonetheless, FIFA moved quickly to embrace the report’s absolution of the bid process. Qatar World Cup officials said the review had upheld “the integrity and quality of our bid,” And Russia’s sports minister, Vitaly Mutko, told reporters, “I hope we will not have talk about this again.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/27/s...ruption-charges-in-us.html?smid==tw-nytsports
 

strong_latte

Juniors
Messages
1,665
Wonderful news. FIFA are one of the scummiest organizations on the planet. Seize their assets and dismantle them.
 

shiznit

Coach
Messages
14,776
I normally hate the U.S. govt getting involved with foreign matters...

But in this Instance I'm cheering them on... Get those dirty merkins!!
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
151,044
Enough is now surely enough. The stench of sleaze and corruption has hung over world soccer's governing body FIFA for so long, the organisation surely cannot continue in its current form.

Once it may have been regarded as merely a laughing stock, a sporting organisation where a few greedy chaps in powerful positions lined their pockets every now and then.

Now it is something far more sinister, resembling a kind of multinational racket where the good of the game is subordinated to the financial good of a handful of its controllers.

Sepp Blatter's ridiculous posturing as some kind of global head of state is bad enough.

His protestations that the game is a force for good in a troubled world, with FIFA in the role of fairy godfather, long ago sounded like the empty, hollow words they are.

FIFA, at the top level, is beyond redemption in its current guise.

Blatter and his placemen gathered in Switzerland this week for what was regarded by many as a fait accompli, his election for an unprecedented fifth term at the helm of the organisation that constantly drags its sport's name through the mire.

Sure, a handful of challengers, now coalesced around Jordan's Prince Ali, had dared to challenge his hegemony. But with the support of his African and Asian lieutenants, it seemed the 79-year-old Swiss was over the line.

The big question now is whether the spectacular arrests by Swiss authorities of several top soccer officials – so they can be extradited to the US on federal corruption charges – will change anything.

We can only hope so. In any other organisation with an ounce of shame and a skerrick of self-awareness it surely would. But this is FIFA we are talking about.

The staff and secretariat might be decent people who do their jobs honestly and diligently, but they are tainted by their association with their employer. The fish, as the old proverb has it, rots from the head down, and the heads at FIFA appear to be very rotten indeed.

What should happen following this series of arrests is that they cancel the elections and agree to a programme of root-and-branch reform by fresh and independent new representatives.

Corrupt and tainted delegates, particularly on the all-powerful executive committee, should be swept away.

The award of the next two World Cups to Russia in 2018 and Qatar in 2022 are so compromised and fraught with so many allegations of corruption and bribery they should be annulled, with fresh bids sought from anyone interested in staging the tournament in those years.

The political situation in Russia raises several problematic issues about its suitability to host such a tournament. The reputation of Qatar, with its "slave labour" working conditions and repression of criticism, hardly makes that a suitable environment for the world's biggest sporting competition, never mind the heat and oppressive conditions the tournament would have to be played in unless the dates are changed and it is moved to winter – itself a huge disruption for the soccer world.

But FIFA being FIFA, and Blatter and his cronies knowing no shame, we can't assume anything but the worst. The events of the next 48 hours will be critical.

http://www.smh.com.au/sport/soccer/...way-the-stench-of-sleaze-20150527-ghb1a2.html
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
151,044
If they take it off Qatar it will end up in court as its under construction but if it can be proven that Qatar were guilty of corruption then they may have it removed.

Problem is its too late to give it to someone else.
 

Haffa

Guest
Messages
15,984
There will be lots of boxes and office furniture being loaded onto a plane in Zurich marked for delivery to Doha.
 

saint.nick

Coach
Messages
19,401
If they take it off Qatar it will end up in court as its under construction but if it can be proven that Qatar were guilty of corruption then they may have it removed.

Problem is its too late to give it to someone else.

No it's not
 

t-ba

Post Whore
Messages
56,152
LoL. I wonder who has bit off more than they can chew here? FIFA or the USG?

Part of me is inclined to believe the the Darth Blatter evil genius route and this was just as planned.
 

Canard

Immortal
Messages
34,568
Reading on the BBC website, the Swiss Govt is saying that FIFA is the "injured party"

So in other words its claimed that corrupt FIFA officials (not including Blatter) have "harmed" FIFA with there conduct.

It's such bullshit. Blatter is lauding this as a "good" thing. The scumbag will win the election and announce a "corruption" probe that will go nowhere.

Its time for one of the powerful federations UEFA?? (as Asia and Africa wont) to just say FU, we aren't going to listen to you anymore.
 

Twizzle

Administrator
Staff member
Messages
151,044
ABC reporting this morning that an investigation has also begun for the WC voting process and surely with all the dirt they have dragged up this will probabaly bring Qatar and Russia down.

Sep trying to postpone the Presidential vote under the circumstances as he will look pretty bad here but this might be the right time to piss him off and ring in the Prince as all this went on under his watch and I really cant see anyone believing he either had nothing to do with it, or didn't know anything about it.
 

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