A former Argentine football official has reportedly committed suicide
after he was accused of bribe-taking in testimony to a trial of top
former FIFA figures in New York.
Jorge Delhon threw himself under a train in a Buenos Aires suburb on
Tuesday, Argentine newspapers Clarin and La Nacion reported on their
websites.
A sports marketing executive, Alejandro Burzaco, had testified in the
trial Tuesday that Delhon and another man, Pablo Paladino, took
millions of dollars in bribes in exchange for rights to broadcast
football games.
Burzaco, the first witness in the trial, painted a damning picture of
corruption in South American soccer, saying millions of dollars in
bribes were paid for TV rights to major tournaments.
Burzaco, the former chairman of an Argentine sports marketing
company, pleaded guilty in November 2015 to racketeering, wire fraud and
money laundering conspiracies and agreed to pay $21.6 million in
restitution.
In US federal court, he detailed how his Torneos y Competencias S.A.
company paid bribes to South American Football Confederation (CONMEBOL)
executives for more than a decade to secure television rights to major
tournaments.
Payments were sent by wire transfer to Swiss bank accounts or passed on as cash “in bags or envelopes,” Burzaco added.
Fox Pan American Sports, part of 21st Century Fox, Brazil’s TV Globo,
Argentine group Full Play and Spain’s MediaPro were among those who
paid — all partners of Torneos y Competencias.
Fox Sports’ parent company, 21st Century Fox, did not immediately respond to a request to comment.
The FIFA corruption trial began Monday, two and a half years after
the United States unveiled the largest graft scandal in the history of
world soccer.
Three South American defendants are in the dock, charged with racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies.
They are Jose Maria Marin, ex-head of Brazil’s Football
Confederation, former FIFA vice president Juan Angel Napout, who was
elected president of CONMEBOL in 2014, and Manuel Burga, who led soccer
in Peru until 2014.
Burzaco said he bribed all three defendants, alleging that Marin received payments of $300,000, going up to $450,000 a year.
The trial is due to last five to six weeks, and prosecutors are
expected to present hundreds of thousands of pages of evidence and
dozens of witnesses.
If convicted by a jury, they risk up to 20 years behind bars for the most serious offenses.
‘Presidential treatment’
But much of Burzaco’s most damning testimony implicated men not on trial
in New York, including ex-South American soccer boss Nicolas Leoz, and
his deputies Julio Grondona and Ricardo Teixeira.
The three of them would have received around $600,000 a year in bribes, he said.
Grondona died in 2014 and while Leoz is under house arrest in
Paraguay, his lawyers have so far frustrated all attempts to extradite
him.
Leoz, Grondona, a former FIFA finance chief and Argentine Football
Association president, and Teixeira, former president of the Brazilian
Football Confederation, were given “presidential treatment,” he said.
They were whisked around by private jet, with “three or four
Mercedes” parked on the tarmac ready and waiting on arrival at CONMEBOL
headquarters.
“They had presidential or diplomatic or royal treatment,” Burzaco
testified. “Like a special dignitary, there were no customs, no
immigration.”
He also told how they were paid for their votes on the executive committee for choosing hosts of the World Cup.
When Leoz failed to vote for Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup at FIFA
headquarters in December 2010, Teixeira and Grondona rounded on him,
Burzaco testified.
“They shook him up. They asked: ‘What are you doing? Are you the one not voting for Qatar?'” he quoted them as saying.
A month later, Grondona received $1 million from Teixeira for voting for Qatar, Burzaco said.
The defendants are just three of the 42 officials and marketing
executives, not to mention three companies, indicted in an exhaustive
236-page complaint detailing 92 separate crimes and 15 corruption
schemes to the tune of $200 million.
Defense lawyers admit widespread corruption at FIFA, but say there is
no evidence that their clients were involved, and will seek to
discredit government witnesses who are likely to include those who cut
plea bargain deals in the case.
AFP
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