Medicine Hat News

US jury acquits Peruvian defendant in FIFA bribery case

- LARRY NEUMEISTER

NEW YORK A former South American soccer official was acquitted Tuesday of a corruption charge stemming from the FIFA bribery scandal after two others were convicted last week, capping a trial in which U.S. prosecutor­s sought to expose a culture of greed and corruption among the powerful men who oversee the world’s most popular sport.

Jurors found Manuel Burga, the 60-year-old former president of Peru’s soccer federation, not guilty of a single racketeeri­ng conspiracy charge.

Burga wept when the acquittal was announced.

After the verdict, he came out of the courtroom, his eyes wet and said: “God Bless America. That’s all I can say.” Burga said he would go home and resume a career as a lawyer that had been largely left behind for the last 15 years during his career as a soccer executive. “My history in soccer is finished,” he said. “I’ll go back to the law.” On Friday, jurors told U.S. District Judge Pamela Chen they were deadlocked on Burga’s case but had reached guilty verdicts on multiple charges against two other former officials: Juan Napout, of Paraguay, and Jose Maria Marin, of Brazil. Chen gave jurors the holiday weekend to think about Burga’s case. The judge had jailed Marin, 85, and Napout, 59, after their conviction­s Friday. The two were acquitted on some lesser charges. Burga, meanwhile, was waiting on his passport to return home.

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