Sepp Blatter: Swiss open criminal proceedings against FIFA president
- Swiss prosecutors open criminal proceedings against Sepp Blatter
- Blatter's lawyer says "no mismanagement occurred"
- FIFA says it is cooperating with investigation
- UEFA yet to comment on situation
(CNN)Sepp
Blatter's tenure as FIFA president suffered a new blow after the Swiss
Attorney General opened criminal proceedings against him on "suspicion
of criminal mismanagement."
A
statement released by the Office of the Attorney General (OAG) of
Switzerland confirmed it was examining a contract signed by Blatter with
the Caribbean Football Union and an alleged "disloyal payment" of $2
million to UEFA president Michel Platini.
Former senior FIFA official Warner was indicted in the wide-ranging bribery scandal, while Platini entered the race to succeed Blatter as FIFA president in July.
The
statement was released after Blatter, who has been in charge of
soccer's world governing body since 1998, was interrogated by OAG
representatives Friday following a meeting of the FIFA Executive
committee in Zurich.
Blatter's lawyer Richard Cullen, said that "no mismanagement occurred."
In
a statement sent to CNN, Cullen said: "We're confident that when the
Swiss authorities have a chance to review the documents and the evidence
they will see that the contract was properly prepared and negotiated by
the appropriate staff members of FIFA."
The
OAG confirmed that it had conducted a search at FIFA headquarters with
the help of the police -- including Blatter's office -- and "data
seized."
"The OAG suspects that on 12
September 2005 Mr. Joseph Blatter has signed a contract with the
Caribbean Football Union (with Jack Warner as the President at this
time); this contract was unfavorable for FIFA," said the statement.
"On
the other hand, there is as suspicion that, in the implementation of
this agreement, Joseph Blatter also violated his fiduciary duties and
acted against the interest of FIFA and/or FIFA Marketing & TV AG.
"Additionally,
Mr. Joseph Blatter is suspected of a disloyal payment of two million
Swiss Francs to Michel Platini, President of Union of European Football
Association (UEFA), at the expense of FIFA, which was allegedly made for
work performed between January 1999 and June 2002 ; this payment was
executed in February 2011," added the statement.
UEFA
was not immediately available for comment after the OAG said that
Platini had been "heard as a person asked to provide information," while
one of Warner's officials told CNN "he wouldn't be saying anything."
Platini, who became president of Uefa -- the European governing body in 2007 -- is also a vice-president of FIFA.
The 60-year-old became a member of FIFA's executive committee in 2002 as well as chairman of the technical development committee and worked on the 2006 World Cup organizing committee.
In a statement, FIFA said it
had been "cooperating" and has "complied with all requests for
documents, date and other information."
It
added: "We will continue this level of cooperation throughout the
investigation. We will have no further comment on the matter as it is an
active investigation."
The incident comes eight days after Secretary General Jerome Valcke was suspended
by FIFA, while the organization investigates allegations he
participated in a scheme to profit off the sale of World Cup tickets on
the black market.
Valcke has been relieved of his duties until further notice.
FIFA
was plunged into crisis in late May when seven officials were charged
for racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering by the FBI.
The charges are part of a U.S. prosecution that indicted a total of 14 people from around the globe.
Meanwhile, a separate probe by Swiss authorities is investigating potential corruption into the bidding process for both the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, which will be hosted by Russia and Qatar.
Qatar's
controversial bid for the latter was backed by Platini, and the
tournament has since been switched from the emirate's summer months to
the winter following concerns over unsafe temperatures.
Platini,
South Korea billionaire Chung Mong-Joon, Jordan's Prince Ali bin
Al-Hussein, ex-Brazil player Zico and Liberian FA chairman Musa Bility
have all announced their intention to run for president.
To
stand in the February 2016 presidential election, candidates will need
letters of support from at least five FIFA member nations.
U.S investigation
Meanwhile,
a U.S. law enforcement official says the U.S. Justice Department is
coordinating and sharing information with the OAG on the ongoing FIFA
investigation.
Blatter is among the senior FIFA officials who remain under investigation, U.S. law enforcement officials told CNN.
The
importance of the Swiss investigation against Blatter is that while the
FBI has been focusing on his possible role in FIFA corruption, there
are limits to U.S. jurisdiction.
U.S.
prosecutors have claimed jurisdiction based on the fact financial
transactions that are part of the alleged bribery schemes used U.S.
banks or occurred in the U.S.
The U.S.
investigators have had some trouble directly linking Blatter to those
U.S. transactions, according to a U.S. official familiar with the
investigation. Swiss investigators may have an easier time making those
links, if they exist, since Blatter is based there.
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