The Guardian (USA)

Players want Fifa vice-president suspended after Guardian investigat­ion

- Matthew Hall

Former Vancouver Whitecaps women’s team players fear a proposed investigat­ion by Major League Soccer into the club’s response to allegation­s of sexual misconduct will be a whitewash and fail to adequately address multiple instances of wrongdoing.

The players, who represente­d Vancouver Whitecaps in the 2008 and 2011 seasons, are supported by Canada’s Profession­al Footballer­s Associatio­n (PFACan) in a call for key club executives to be fired.

It is understood the players this week will also demand Concacaf suspends its president, Victor Montaglian­i, until an independen­t investigat­ion is completed into events surroundin­g Canada Soccer’s failure to deal with separate allegation­s against former Whitecaps coach Bob Birarda in 2008. Birarda was head coach of Canada’s under-20 women’s national team and the Whitecaps women’s team while Montaglian­i was director of national teams. Montaglian­i also serves as a Fifa vice-president.

At the time, an internal investigat­ion into Birarda’s behavior resulted in Canada Soccer and Whitecaps stating the coach had left his roles by “mutual agreement”, yet he continued to coach girls’ youth soccer.

In 2019, Montaglian­i told the Guardian he had taken the allegation­s against Birarda seriously.

“Absolutely the allegation­s were treated seriously,” Montaglian­i said. “The federation was notified through our general secretaria­t. Our staff was dispatched to meet with this ombudsman. There were a couple of days of discussion­s and interviews and after that it was deemed that this coach was no longer with our program. He was not an employee of the federation. We would just pay him a per diem as he was coaching. He parted ways with our program and the Whitecaps followed suit in parting ways with him as well. I never saw the report but the informatio­n that was given to the board [was sufficient].”

Birarda was arrested in December 2020 and faces six counts of sexual exploitati­on, two counts of sexual assault and one count of child luring, involving allegation­s spanning 20 years from 1988 to 2008. He is out on bail and has yet to enter a plea.

“I welcome the interest of Major League Soccer in these issues but we don’t need MLS to be in charge of this investigat­ion,” said Malloree Enoch. In a Guardian investigat­ion published last week, Enoch alleged her former coach Hubert Busby Jr attempted to pressure her for sex during a recruitmen­t process spanning 2010 and 2011. Busby denies the allegation­s.

After the Guardian reported the allegation­s last week, MLS said it intended to launch an investigat­ion. “MLS will only look after its own interests,” Enoch said. “We need to see a thorough investigat­ion.”

The former Whitecaps players are expected to release a statement in the next 48 hours supported by PFACan that will include a demand that any Whitecaps or Canada Soccer executive involved in the departures of Birarda and Busby, but who chose to misreprese­nt the reasons behind their exits, be fired.

“These executives have lost their ability to continue in a leadership position,” Paul Champ, legal counsel to PFACan, told the Guardian.

The players will also call for Concacaf and Fifa to suspend Montaglian­i from his roles until an independen­t investigat­ion into the 2008 events is completed. That issue centers on Birarda being allowed to coach in the local community after allegation­s of sexual misconduct were known by Canada Soccer.

“We are happy we can carry this burden for the players,” Champ said of the union’s support. “There is already some reflection going on at Canada Soccer and we would like to continue to push them to consider these issues. All of these issues are connected and we need to know what the governing bodies are doing about it.”

The Whitecaps organizati­on has been in crisis since the Guardian last week revealed the allegation­s by Enoch. Chief executive officer Axel Schuster called Enoch on Friday night to apologize for the club’s failure to act at the time of the alleged incidents.

After local journalist­s camped outside the club’s headquarte­rs on Friday hoping to speak with officials about the allegation­s, Schuster released a statement claiming unnamed executives had been placed on leave.

Still, the club has yet to respond to questions from the Guardian sent to chief operating officer Rachel Lewis on 19 October. Lewis, along with current management executives Dan Lenarduzzi, Greg Anderson, and Bob Lenarduzzi are longtime executives at the club and were aware of the allegation­s against Birarda and Busby at the time they were made.

Dan Lenarduzzi, a Whitecaps club vice-president, emailed members of the women’s team in 2011 after Busby’s departure from the club instructin­g them to not comment publicly on his exit. The club did not mention the alle

gations when Busby left the Whitecaps, instead saying it was in “the club’s best interest to make a change in coaching staff for our women’s team program”.

Busby told the Guardian that allegation­s of misconduct were never discussed when his contract was being negotiated at the end of the 2011 season.

Busby, the head coach of the Jamaica women’s national team, is scheduled to meet with the Jamaican Football Federation on Tuesday to discuss the allegation­s around his time with the Whitecaps.

Issues with how Whitecaps executives have dealt with abuse claims have not been limited to the women’s teams. In 2017, the mother of a Vancouver Whitecaps male youth team player who was allegedly sexually assaulted by his teammates claimed the club discourage­d the boy and his family from immediatel­y reporting the incident to police.

The mother of the player – a minor at the time of the incident – told local media the MLS club provided her with two options to address the issue: hire either a private investigat­or or a moonlighti­ng police officer who had previously provided the club with matchday security to look into the allegation­s.

“Our gut instinct was that they were trying to downplay it and protect themselves,” she said at the time. “We felt that they wanted to deal with it internally and not let it get out.”

The assault involved the player being pinned to the ground inside the team’s training-ground locker room before what was described as “a graphic sex assault”.

“These were his teammates,” the player’s mother said. “It’s mind-blowing to think that this even happened.”

Police eventually charged two players with sexual assault after the mother called the police. It is unclear whether the Whitecaps reported the incident to the police. “The safety and wellbeing of our players is our top priority and we have been cooperatin­g fully with the [police] investigat­ion,” the Whitecaps said at the time.

 ?? ?? Victor Montaglian­i is a Fifa vice-president and Concacaf’s president. Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA
Victor Montaglian­i is a Fifa vice-president and Concacaf’s president. Photograph: Erik S Lesser/EPA

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