FIFA Officials Arrested on Corruption Charges; Face Extradition to U.S.

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A lot of people making comments in this thread who know nothing about the sport and its politics.
Bunch of people who are fans of the game every four years.

In terms of charges Sepp Blatter is for all intents and purposes untouchable, he has too many allies among the different federations and is owed too many favors. Even the U.S. Won't be able to make a move on him as it stands.

Everyone who isn't a casual knows UEFA > FIFA. A large part of the reason Blatter is still president is because Plantini does not want to be president.

If Qatar/Russia are stripped of their World Cups (imo they should be) England will get it before the USA does, this whole situation just makes this more likely. England was also supposedly the back up if Brazil did not get their shyt together in time.

Based on the tone of this thread it seems some you want FIFA to fail unfortunately some will be thrown under the bus but for the most part FIFA will be fine they hold way too much political and economic power to fall. They also have the people (wallets) on their side, if FIFA along with all the federations and leagues were somehow shut down it would spark World War 3.

AC Milan (top 3 Football club of all time) is owned by Silvio Burlusconi, who also serves as the clubs president and is the on again off again prime minister of Italy. Real Madrid (another top 3 Football club of all time) is owned by the fans but is head by Florentino Perez. Because of his influence Real Madrid regularly takes loans from Spanish banks that will never be paid back. Some of these guys are small fry compared to some of the FIFA guys.

Brazil National team and its respective players have made Nike too much money, and along with their reach across other sports and disciplines, I think Nike will be fine.

I wish this situation would change something, make FIFA better but it won't unless the put someone like Maradona or Romario in charge, although the potential for infinite levels of fukkery are too much to risk.

Will be interesting to see what happens.

Nah.

The whole point of bringing a RICO case against FIFA is because RICO allows the DOJ to at guys who aren't directly involved. It's what allowed the DOJ to take down the NY Mafia's top guys who were way more literally and figeratively protected from any fukkery WAY than Blatter ever was (also probably responsible for less deaths). Money was being moved around American banks by Blatter's cronies' cronie's cronies' = you're done. There's a reason guys sing like fukking birds when hit with a charge under the RICO Act, because you can't win and they'll go after the big dogs. If you were in any way culpable you're going down. As powerful, rich, protected, no paper trail as you think Blatter might be the US Dept of Justice has it beat a million fold.

Dude's are already pleading guilty and copping pleas.

Sepp Blatter is fukked. FIFA is fighting an enemy with unlimited resources, that does not bring charges unless they've got a bulletproof case (93% conviction rate for the DoJ is nothing to play with), with a new Attorney General that wants to make a name for herself that isn't going to be happy with just nailing a handful of executives. America also does not give a flying fukk about football so FIFA has nothing to hold over their heads.

As for what happens after this, I don't know if anything changes but yeah some big people are going down.
 
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FIFA’s Paris Cash Drop: $10,000 Bundles Stacked in Suitcase
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byAndrew Martin
2:58 PM EDT
May 27, 2015
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Inside FIFA's Pervasive Corruption Charges


The suitcase was waiting in a hotel room in Paris, the cash inside neatly bundled into $10,000 stacks.

The money, U.S. authorities allege, was payment for one of the most sought-after prizes in world soccer: a nod from FIFA, the sport’s governing body, to host the World Cup.

That allegation, involving a bid by South Africa for the 2010 Cup, is contained in a stunning 47-count indictment unsealed Wednesday by the U.S. Justice Department, the result of a years-long investigation of corruption at FIFA.


While scandals are nothing new at FIFA, the portrait of corruption painted by federal prosecutors rivals the worst in sports history for length and breadth. Money laundering, racketeering, bribery, kickbacks and more were all embraced by FIFA officials as business as usual, the authorities say.

“The indictment alleges corruption that is rampant, systemic and deep-rooted, both abroad and here in the United States,” U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch said in a statement. “It spans at least two generations of soccer officials.”

One of those officials, according to the indictment, was a former history teacher from Trinidad and Tobago named Jack Warner -- the man for whom that suitcase was allegedly waiting.

A soccer official in his native country, Warner had won an election in 1990 to become president of Concacaf, the soccer confederation that oversees Central and North America.

‘Gift’ Envelopes
In 2004, FIFA’s leadership gathered to consider bids from countries that wanted to host the 2010 World Cup. Among the hopefuls were Morocco, Egypt and South Africa.

Warner had ties to the South Africans, who had failed in a bid for the 2006 World Cup. One of his relatives had organized friendly matches in South Africa for teams in Warner’s confederation, according to the indictment. So Warner authorized the relative to fly to Paris to meet with a high-ranking South African bid official in a hotel, where prosecutors said the suitcase full of cash was waiting.

Years later, in 2011, Warner directed Caribbean football officials to pick up a “gift” -- an envelope containing $40,000 in cash -- ahead of the election for FIFA’s president, according to the indictment. He became angry, it said, when he learned that a Caribbean official had told a Concacaf official in New York about the cash.

“There are some people here who think they are more pious than thou. If you’re pious, open a church, friends,” he said, according to the indictment. “Our business is our business.”

‘No Due Process’
Warner, who stood down from all soccer posts in 2011, said in a statement that he was innocent of any charges.

“I have been afforded no due process and I have not even been questioned in this matter,” he said in the statement. “I have walked away from the politics of world football to immerse myself in the improvement of lives in this country where I shall, God willing, die.”

In all, 14 people were indicted on charges that include racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering schemes. Four others pleaded guilty.

In a related case, Swiss authorities said they were examining allegations of money laundering and criminal mismanagement related to selecting host countries for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup, awarded to Russia and Qatar, respectively. Swiss authorities seized electronic data and documents from FIFA’s Zurich headquarters on Wednesday.

FIFA’s president, Joseph “Sepp” Blatter, wasn’t charged, though several members of his inner circle were.

“Such misconduct has no place in football and we will ensure that those who engage in it are put out of the game,” Blatter said Wednesday, in remarks on FIFA’s website. Concacaf declined to comment on specific allegations, adding in a statement on its website that it is deeply concerned with the developments and will continue to cooperate with authorities.

Concealed Payments
Most of the allegations focus on soccer officials in the Americas, where prosecutors say leaders of regional confederations solicited and accepted bribes from sports marketing firms that seek media and marketing contracts for major regional tournaments, a major source of revenue for soccer confederations.

Over a 24-year period, FIFA officials conspired with the soccer marketing agencies for bribes and kickbacks in exchange for contracts, often concealing the payments through shell companies, offshore accounts or other schemes, prosecutors said.

Indeed, when one set of soccer leaders is ousted for corruption, the new leaders started soliciting bribes almost immediately after taking office, even as they pledge reform, the indictment said.

Reform Pledges
For instance, in May 2012, FIFA vice president Jeffrey Webb, of the Cayman Islands, was elected president of Concacaf. He promised a new culture of transparency and accountability that would depart markedly from Warner’s tenure.

Within months, Webb hired a new general secretary who had “the competence and integrity to implement our road map to reform,” Webb was quoted as saying in an article on mlssoccer.com. That executive was Enrique Sanz, who had worked at a sports marketing company called Traffic Sports USA.

Sanz promised a new day as well, vowing to create a more transparent and trustworthy Concacaf. “We’ll create committees on ethics, integrity and transparency that will be above us all,” Goal.com quoted him as saying shortly after he was hired.

Co-Conspirator #4
The indictment painted a different picture about Webb and a person it identified only as “Co-Conspirator #4” -- a former Traffic Sports USA executive who was hired as Concacaf’s general secretary in July 2012. Those and other details from the indictment match information from official releases about Sanz.

Sanz wasn’t charged or mentioned by name in the indictment and couldn’t be located for comment. Webb couldn’t be reached for comment.

“Almost immediately after taking office,” the indictment alleged, “both men resumed their involvement in criminal activities.”

Co-Conspirator #4 quickly began negotiating with a former colleague at Traffic Sports USA for media rights to Concacaf tournaments -- including its main competition, the Gold Cup -- the indictment said. At Webb’s behest, the co-conspirator negotiated a bribe for Webb and a second bribe a year later, when the contract was renewed, it said.

New Pool
Webb used some of the money from bribes to build a pool at his suburban Atlanta home and to buy real estate in Stone Mountain, Ga., the indictment says.

Co-Conspirator #4 allegedly benefited, too. An associate of Webb’s, Costas Takkas, bought him an “expensive painting” at a New York gallery, the indictment says. Takkas, who couldn’t be reached for comment, was charged as part of the government’s case.

In the battle to win the 2010 World Cup, more than one country was wrangling for Warner’s favor.

Months before the May 2004 vote on the venue, a representative from Morocco offered Warner $1 million in exchange for his vote, prosecutors said. South Africa countered: High-ranking officials at FIFA, the South African government and the South African bid committee had arranged for a $10 million payment from the government to the Caribbean Football Union, Warner’s home base of support, to “support the African Diaspora,” the indictment says.

Warner accepted the offer and later indicated he’d voted for South Africa, according to the indictment.

Ultimately, prosecutors said, the South Africans struggled to make the payment from government funds, so FIFA paid the bill, using money that was intended to support South Africa’s World Cup.

Referring to the practice of paying bribes to obtain commercial rights at tournaments, Aaron Davidson, president of Traffic Sports USA, allegedly told one of the co-conspirators: “Is it illegal? It is illegal. Within the big picture of things, a company that has worked in this industry for 30 years, is it bad? It is bad.”

Davidson, who couldn’t be reached for comment, was also charged Wednesday.


Stack-Bundles-R.I.P..jpg


:mjcry:
 

The Fukin Prophecy

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What I want to know is did these clowns really think they were going to get away with this?

Giving the cup to Qatar was so fukking blatant payolla...like a robbing a bank with your drivers license taped to your forehead...

All Qatar has is oil money, I don't even think they have a competitive national team...They have no stadiums, horrendous conditions to play football in and sharia law to top it all off...what football fan in his or her mind would travel to that shythole? Are they going to section off a portion of the country where their demonic religious laws do not apply to football fans?

Personally if I was a world class player like Ronaldo/Messi I would be demanding 9 digits to show up to this tournament...
 

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@Billy Hoyle, Thank you, I've been to the UAE and seen first hand how they treat their workers who are mostly from the Indian subcontinent. Its actually quiet normal to be in downtown Dubai and have a foreign worker or two fall from buildings. People just start recording on their mobile phones. I have no idea how the whole world sits by while this shyt goes on.
:mindblown:

Are you fukking serious?
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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What has the women wearing the scarves got to do with being unable to host sporting events. Also most of those women choose to wear scarfs, so why does it bother you?

Compare that to Saudi Arabia (U.S ally) where the women can't even drive or leave home escorted. But that doesn't bother you.

The USA men team is a joke everyone knows that. Come talk to me when you beat Mexico. :scust:
I'm calling BS on that.

I worked with a woman from Kuwait and Qatar...she told me its not a "choice"

its basically, you do this or you get that punishment :ufdup:

And yeah, the Saudi's fukking annoy me. I'm not condoning that.

and the USMNT is coming baby :blessed: :ohlawd:
 

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Nah.

The whole point of bringing a RICO case against FIFA is because RICO allows the DOJ to at guys who aren't directly involved. It's what allowed the DOJ to take down the NY Mafia's top guys who were way more literally and figeratively protected from any fukkery WAY than Blatter ever was (also probably responsible for less deaths). Money was being moved around American banks by Blatter's cronies' cronie's cronies' = you're done. There's a reason guys sing like fukking birds when hit with a charge under the RICO Act, because you can't win and they'll go after the big dogs. If you were in any way culpable you're going down. As powerful, rich, protected, no paper trail as you think Blatter might be the US Dept of Justice has it beat a million fold.

Dude's are already pleading guilty and copping pleas.

Sepp Blatter is fukked. FIFA is fighting an enemy with unlimited resources, that does not bring charges unless they've got a bulletproof case (93% conviction rate for the DoJ is nothing to play with), with a new Attorney General that wants to make a name for herself that isn't going to be happy with just nailing a handful of executives. America also does not give a flying fukk about football so FIFA has nothing to hold over their heads.

As for what happens after this, I don't know if anything changes but yeah some big people are going down.
yuuuuuup

Whats also interesting is that because the US is doing the case, most of the real interests in Europe and Asia and South America don't get their hands dirty by losing favor by pushing for reform.

The US has no real stake in FIFA so we can throw the book at these dudes and tell FIFA to go fukk itself if they even dare get mad.

This is a landmark moment in international law.
 

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What I want to know is did these clowns really think they were going to get away with this?

Giving the cup to Qatar was so fukking blatant payolla...like a robbing a bank with your drivers license taped to your forehead...

All Qatar has is oil money, I don't even think they have a competitive national team...They have no stadiums, horrendous conditions to play football in and sharia law to top it all off...what football fan in his or her mind would travel to that shythole? Are they going to section off a portion of the country where their demonic religious laws do not apply to football fans?

Personally if I was a world class player like Ronaldo/Messi I would be demanding 9 digits to show up to this tournament...
They got sloppy and everyone got fed up

European newspapers had RECORDINGS of these dudes engaging in bribes a little over a year ago and I'm guessing that expedited the fed case.
 

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Calm down buddy, I'm Muslim and I've been waiting for Qatar to loose the world cup since they got it. They mistreat migrant workers, confiscate passports, pay them less than they deserve. Basically they using slaves to build the world cup stadiums and that is not something that we football fans will not allow. :stopitslime:
I don't give a fukk if you're a muslim. Thats already strike 1 if you ask me

But regardless, Qatar is akin to giving Iceland the WC :mjlol:
 

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The USA men team is a joke everyone knows that. Come talk to me when you beat Mexico. :scust:

I don't know you and have nothing against Islam or Iran, but come on man. Do so research before you say something like this. Mexico hasn't beaten the US since 2009.
 

Roaden Polynice

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Calm down buddy, I'm Muslim and I've been waiting for Qatar to loose the world cup since they got it. They mistreat migrant workers, confiscate passports, pay them less than they deserve. Basically they using slaves to build the world cup stadiums and that is not something that we football fans will not allow. :stopitslime:

You muslim and you wanted Qatar to lose the WC? :what:

There's a name for your type round these parts :mjpls:

The mission of FIFA is to spread football (well, theoretically at least, we are seeing that their real mission is to have enough money so their cats can have their own apartment) not to spread the world cup to countries that are unable to host a successful tournament.
And you listen to those fukking liars, it was one thing if they said "well, they'll struggle, but to got to help the little guy" (some little guys, bunch oil millionaires, but whatever) but they come out and say it was the best bid.
That's straight up bullshyt.
They got bribed to vote for Qatar.

Spreading football to countries that can't host the tournament is the dirty part about spreading football. I'm not sure why people have such a hard time understanding this :dwillhuh:

That chart that was posted earlier, it said that Qatar was a "high risk" host country. Hosting the World Cup would make them a low risk, shyt isn't brain surgery :heh:
 
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