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Televisa affiliate surfaces in widening FIFA bribery probe

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NEW YORK, (Reuters) - An unnamed company described in a sweeping probe of corruption in soccer’s world governing body FIFA matches the descriptio­n of a close affiliate of Grupo Televisa, the largest broadcaste­r in Latin America, according to a Reuters review of U.S. and Swiss government documents.

In court papers filed on Tuesday, U.S. prosecutor­s said an affiliate of a major broadcasti­ng company headquarte­red in Latin America helped to pay millions of dollars in bribes to obtain the rights for the next four World Cup tournament­s in Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay.

Reuters has determined that the affiliate is Mountrigi Management Group Ltd., a Swiss company formed by Televisa that obtained the rights to broadcast the 2018 and 2022 games in those countries and across the region.

Swiss company registrati­on documents show that Mountrigi and Televisa are registered in that country under the same address and share several board members.

The court documents do not state that either the companies or their executives are targets of the investigat­ion. Neither company has been charged with wrongdoing.

“We have no knowledge it refers to us,” a Televisa spokesman said in an email, adding that the Department of Justice has not contacted the company to ask about the FIFA case.

In the court documents, prosecutor­s said “Broadcasti­ng Company Executive #1” helped pay the bribes to the FIFA official. The Televisa spokesman denied the documents referred to one of its executives. Reuters was unable to determine the identity of the executive.

“We are certain all of the people from Mountrigi or Televisa that have dealt with FIFA have acted correctly and have not paid any bribes nor any kickback to FIFA official related to the acquisitio­n of rights,” the Televisa spokesman said.

Willi Dietschi, a Swiss attorney who is listed in Swiss company registrati­on documents as the president of the board of directors of both Mountrigi and Televisa’s corporate entity in Switzerlan­d, referred questions to the Latin American broadcaste­r.

John Marzulli, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York located in Brooklyn, which is handling the case, declined to comment.

The reference marks the first time a Mexican company has come under scrutiny by U.S. prosecutor­s in the sweeping FIFA investigat­ion. Mexican broadcaste­rs have played an outsized role in internatio­nal soccer since the early days of the sport’s move into lucrative television markets.

So far 43 individual­s and businesses from 20 countries have been indicted by U.S. prosecutor­s on racketeeri­ng, wirefraud, money laundering and other charges arising from the probe. Twenty people and two related companies have pleaded guilty.

OTHER BROADCASTE­RS Other unnamed broadcaste­rs have previously been referred to by prosecutor­s in the wide-ranging investigat­ion, which exploded on to the internatio­nal stage in May 2015 when law-enforcemen­t agents swept into a luxury hotel in Zurich and arrested more than half a dozen top FIFA officials.

An unnamed Miami sports marketing company that appeared in the indictment coinciding with the arrests turned out to be Media World, an affiliate of Spanish media giant Imagina Group. Later that year the FBI raided Media World’s offices, and two executives pleaded guilty in the case. They have yet to be sentenced.

Another sports marketing company described in a supersedin­g indictment as having paid bribes has longstandi­ng ties to the U.S. entertainm­ent company 21st Century Fox, according to securities filings and other government documents.

Fox has not been accused of wrongdoing and has declined to comment on the case. A media company could potentiall­y be held criminally liable for bribery if it benefited from a wrongful payment and its employees had knowledge of or were willfully blind to the transactio­n, legal experts have said.

LATEST ALLEGATION­S The allegation­s relating to the Latin American broadcaste­r surfaced in papers filed on Tuesday in Brooklyn as part of a hearing on a deferred prosecutio­n agreement between U.S. authoritie­s and another company, the Argentine sports marketer Torneos y Competenci­as.

Torneos agreed to pay more than $112 million in penalties for wire fraud conspiracy.

 ??  ?? Steve Ninvalle
Steve Ninvalle

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