Montreal Gazette

Criminal probe begins for FIFA’s Blatter

Swiss police investigat­ing financial corruption

- GRAHAM DUNBAR

ZURICH FIFA president Sepp Blatter was placed under criminal investigat­ion by Swiss authoritie­s on Friday as a probe into soccer corruption reached the highest levels and left his grip on the top job in peril.

The Swiss attorney general’s office opened proceeding­s against Blatter for possible criminal mismanagem­ent and misappropr­iation of FIFA money. Authoritie­s also searched Blatter’s office and seized data.

The announceme­nts came as FIFA wrapped up a two-day executive committee meeting and marked another stunning day of turmoil for the governing body and Blatter, who have been targeted by American and Swiss investigat­ions into corruption.

The 79-year-old Blatter is set to step down in February as a result of those probes, but Friday’s events made an early exit seem inevitable.

The opening of formal criminal proceeding­s against Blatter could lead the FIFA ethics committee to provisiona­lly suspend him from duty.

Blatter’s U.S.-based lawyer, Richard Cullen, said in a statement his client was co-operating and that “certainly no mismanagem­ent occurred.”

The latest allegation­s also threaten UEFA president Michel Platini, Blatter’s onetime protege and favourite to succeed him in February’s election. Platini was questioned as a witness Friday about taking a “disloyal payment” from Blatter of 2 million Swiss francs (now US$2.04 million) of FIFA money in February 2011.

At the time, Platini was already tipped as a future FIFA leader though unlikely to run against Blatter in that year’s presidenti­al election — instead backing the incumbent against Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar. Blatter was re-elected in May 2011 after Bin Hammam withdrew amid bribery allegation­s.

According to Switzerlan­d’s attorney general, the money was supposedly paid nine years later for Platini’s work as Blatter’s football adviser at FIFA from 1999-2002.

Under Swiss law, a payment is classified disloyal if it is against the best interest of the employer — in this case FIFA.

Platini said in a statement issued by UEFA that he was entitled to receive the money.

“I wish to state that this amount relates to work which I carried out under a contract with FIFA and I was pleased to have been able to clarify all matters relating to this with the authoritie­s,” Platini said. The statement did not address the apparent nine-year wait for payment.

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Sepp Blatter

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