Arab Times

Secret payments to soccer officials cloaked by car names

Men accused of bribes negotiated sale to Qataris: witness

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NEW YORK, Nov 22, (AP): Payments to the head of Peruvian soccer were masked under the name “Fiat.” Money for Paraguay’s boss was listed as “Honda.”

Excel spreadshee­ts detailed the cloak-and-dagger recording system of money given to “Benz,” “VW,” “Toyota,” ‘’Kia,” and “Peugeot,” among others, including a pair of payments labeled “Q2022” that appeared to be related to the FIFA executive committee’s 2010 vote giving Qatar rights to host the 2022 World Cup.

“We basically decided to make up fantasy names for each of the people involved,” sports marketing executive Santiago Pena testified Monday as the trial of three high-ranking soccer executives entered its second week in federal court in Brooklyn.

Pena worked for Full Play Group, a company based in Argentina that won marketing rights to South American World Cup qualifiers and the Copa America and Copa Libertator­es tournament­s.

He testified that as part of an agreement to pay the governing body for North and Central America and the Caribbean $35 million to participat­e in the 2016 Centennial Copa America, Full Play agreed to pay $10 million to then-CONCACAF president Jeffrey Webb — who later pleaded guilty to racketeeri­ng charges and agreed to forfeit $6.7 million.

Hugo and Mariano Jinkis, a father and son who are Full Play’s controllin­g principals, were indicted along with many top soccer executives in 2015 by U.S. prosecutor­s. The father and son have not been extradited thus far.

Pena began working for Full Play in 2009 and testified that he maintained the ledger at the direction of his bosses. Pena said he took the ledger from his office on a thumb drive along with a

In this Jan 31, 2015 file photo, Australia’s coach Ange Postecoglo­u waves at the crowd after his team won the AFC Asian Cup final soccer match between South Korea and Australia in Sydney, Australia. Postecoglo­u has quit as Australia coach a week after the Socceroos secured a spot at next

year’s World Cup with an interconti­nental win over Honduras. (AP)

stack of documents shortly after the first indictment­s were unsealed in May 2015.

He left the company that November and kept the evidence at his home before turning it over the American prosecutor­s as part of an agreement last February in which the government agreed not to charge Pena if he testified.

Juan Angel Napout, the ex-president of Paraguay’s soccer federation, Jose Maria Marin, the former president of Brazil’s soccer federation, and Manuel Burga, the ex-head of Peru’s soccer federation, are on trial for racketeeri­ng conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy.

Rafael Esquivel, the former president of Venezuelan soccer, was nicknamed “Benz” and his ledger listed a $750,000 payment owed for “Q2022.” He pleaded guilty in November 2016 to racketeeri­ng conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy. Luis Chiriboga, the former president of Ecuadorean soccer, was nicknamed “Toyota” and his ledger listed a $500,000 payment owed for “Q2022.” He was convicted in his own country in November 2016 of money laundering.

Neither Esquivel nor Chiriboga was on the FIFA executive committee that made Qatar the 2022 World Cup host. M. Kristin Mace, the assistant US attorney questionin­g Pena, did not ask whether the payments were to be redirected to others.

Other nicknames included Honda” for Napout, “Fiat” for Burga, “VW” for Carlos Chavez of Bolivia, “Kia” for Sergio Jadue of Chile and “Peugeot” for Jose Meiszner, the former general secretary of the South American governing body CONMEBOL. Luis Bedoya of Colombia was referred to as “Flemic,” after a company he owned.

Pena said that as part of the contracts for the Copa America covering 2015, 2019 and 2023, plus the 2016 Centennial Copa America, six- and sevenfigur­e payments were made to soccer federation presidents and the CONMEBOL general secretary, listing amount for various events, plus for signing contracts. He said the money was not recorded on Full Play’s regular accounts.

“They were secret payments,” he said.

He said money never was sent directly to Napout and that instead he was directed by Mariano Jinkis to wire transfer funds to third-party money changers known as cambistas, who charged a fee of about 3 percent. The cambistas delivered U.S. dollars in cash to Full Play, which was kept in a safe and Pena gave it to Mariano Jinkis in envelopes to deliver to Napout. Under cross-examinatio­n, Pena said he had no knowledge of whether Napout received any of the money.

A sports marketing company whose owners have been charged with bribing top soccer officials tried to negotiate a sale to an entity associated with Paris Saint-Germain team president Nasser Al-Khelaifi, a witness testified Tuesday in federal court.

As the second week of testimony finished in the trial of three former presidents of South American governing bodies, the son of the ex-head of Ecuador’s soccer federation gave an emotional account of how he laundered $2.8 million for his father, who is under house arrest in Quito after receiving a 10-year sentence for corruption.

“This is the hardest moment of my life,” said Jose Luis Chiriboga, a soccer agent, recalling how his father, Luis, told him: “Sorry, son, I destroyed your life.”

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