Stabroek News

Fallen FIFA boss Blatter says met U.S. lawyers, but is not a suspect

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ZURICH, (Reuters) - Disgraced former FIFA president Sepp Blatter said on Friday he had met lawyers from the U.S. Justice Department but was not a suspect in their soccer-related corruption investigat­ions.

The 81-year-old, banned for six years by FIFA’s own ethics committee at the height of a scandal engulfing world soccer’s governing body, told journalist­s he had met the U.S. lawyers in October or November, without going into further details.

Several dozen soccer officials, including some from FIFA, were indicted in the United States in 2015 on corruption-related chances.

Blatter was not among them, although he subsequent­ly said his lawyer had advised him not to travel abroad.

“I have had very little contact from my American lawyers because I was never a person of interest under scrutiny by the American justice,” he told a group of internatio­nal reporters on Friday.

“I have been investigat­ed in two or three matters ... but there is no wrongdoing.” There was no immediate comment from the U.S. Justice Department.

“STILL POPULAR” Blatter and Ex-UEFA president Michel Platini were banned from all footballre­lated activities in 2015, initially for eight years, over a 2 million Swiss franc ($2 million) payment FIFA made to Platini in 2011, with Blatter’s approval, for work done a decade earlier.

Blatter said on Friday he had become a “punching bag” for all FIFA’s problems but that he was still generally liked by his Swiss compatriot­s.

“Here in the city of Zurich and Switzerlan­d in general, I am not only accepted but they like me,” said Blatter, who has denied all charged against him.

“I don’t have the impression that I am a rejected man. Why should I be rejected? I have done a good (job at) FIFA ... I feel that wherever I go the people and young people recognise me and want to take a picture and say hello. There are still fans who write to me.”

He said Swiss prosecutor­s had not contacted him over a separate case initiated in September 2015 against him relating to accusation­s of criminal mismanagem­ent and misappropr­iation.

“I have never heard anything, my lawyer has heard nothing about that,” he said. “That does not surprise me, because there was no reasons to open a case against me.”

“I have been interviewe­d and I will be interviewe­d in future but not in these cases; I am interviewe­d in cases concerning the activities in FIFA, as a person of informatio­n.”

Swiss authoritie­s have also opened investigat­ions into the decision to award the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar respective­ly, into Germany’s successful bid to host the 2006 World Cup and against former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke. ($1 = 0.9983 Swiss francs)

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