Los Angeles Times

Two charged in alleged bribes for World Cup rights

Former Fox TV executives implicated in internatio­nal soccer corruption scheme.

- By Kevin Baxter

Two former Fox television executives are facing federal charges for wire fraud and money laundering in connection with a longrunnin­g government investigat­ion into alleged bribery and corruption in internatio­nal soccer.

The charges against Hernan Lopez and Carlos Martinez were made in a 53count supersedin­g indictment unsealed in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Monday.

In the last five years, more than 40 individual­s and two corporatio­ns have been indicted on criminal charges pertaining to the awarding of media and marketing rights for high-profile soccer competitio­ns, including the World Cup, World Cup qualifying, the CONCACAF Gold Cup and the Copa America, South America’s regional championsh­ip.

The U.S. attorney in the Eastern District of New York alleged that Lopez, 49, and Martinez, 51, used bribes to gather confidenti­al informatio­n during the bidding for broadcast rights to the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournament­s.

FIFA, the internatio­nal governing body for soccer, awarded Fox the rights to both competitio­ns in 2011 and four years later added an extension through the 2026 tournament.

“The charges unsealed today reflect this office’s ongoing commitment to rooting out corruption at the highest levels of internatio­nal soccer and at the businesses engaged in promoting and broadcasti­ng the sport,” Richard P. Donoghue, U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement. “Companies and individual­s alike should understand that, regardless of their wealth or power, they will be brought to justice if they use the U.S. financial system to further corrupt ends.”

Prosecutor­s charged Lopez and Martinez with making bribes in annual payments of millions of dollars to South American soccer officials in exchange for the broadcasti­ng rights to the world’s biggest tournament­s.

The U.S. broadcasti­ng rights for the World Cup had been held by ESPN since 1994.

“By conspiring to enrich themselves through bribery and kickback schemes relating to the sale of media and marketing rights to various soccer tournament­s and events, among other schemes, the defendants deprived FIFA, the confederat­ions and their constituen­t organizati­ons — and, therefore, the national member associatio­ns, national teams, youth leagues and developmen­t programs that relied on financial support from their parent organizati­ons — of the full value of those rights,” the indictment said.

“In addition, the schemes had powerful anti-competitiv­e effects, distorting the market for the commercial rights associated with soccer and underminin­g the ability of other sports marketing companies to compete for such rights on terms more favorable to the rightshold­ers.”

Martinez, who lives in Florida, was chief executive of Fox Networks in Latin America. Lopez, of Los Angeles, was head of Fox Internatio­nal Channels. Lopez left the company in 2016. That same year, he, with financial backing from Fox, founded Wondery, a podcast network that worked with the Los Angeles Times on an adaptation of “Dirty John,” a true-crime series by staff writer Christophe­r Goffard.

Martinez left Fox in May of last year. He and Lopez are scheduled to be arraigned Thursday in Brooklyn. They each face maximum penalties of 20 years in prison. Attorneys for both men said their clients were innocent and predicted swift exoneratio­n.

Also named in the indictment, which was delivered by a grand jury March 18, are former Imagina Media Audiovisua­l CEO Gerard Romy and the Uruguayan sports marketing company Full Play Group SA. The Justice Department said the charges against Romy and Full Play allege racketeeri­ng conspiracy.

“As charged in the indictment, over a period of many years, the defendants and their co-conspirato­rs corrupted the governance and business of internatio­nal soccer with bribes and kickbacks and engaged in criminal fraudulent schemes that caused significan­t harm to the sport of soccer,” said Ryan L. Korner, special agent in charge for the IRS.

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