Two convictions in FIFA corruption scandal overturned
Two convictions in the FIFA corruption case have been overturned by a US federal judge citing a recent Supreme Court ruling.
Two convictions in the FIFA corruption case have been overturned by a US federal judge citing a recent Supreme Court ruling.
Hernán López, a former executive with 21st Century Fox and Argentine sports marketing firm Full Play were found guilty in March of paying bribes and kickbacks to South American football officials in various schemes related to television and marketing rights.
The case was one of several to emerge from the 2015 probe from the US Justice Department which rocked world soccer's governing body FIFA and continental confederations for South and North America.
The US investigation, which included raids on FIFA officials in Zurich, led to a series of arrests and trails and subsequent charges, convictions and guilty pleas.
López and Full Play were found guilty on charges of wire fraud conspiracy and money-laundering conspiracy in the March ruling.
López faced up to 40 years in prison and millions of dollars in penalties.
Full Play – whose owners Hugo and Mariano Jinkis remain fugitives – was expected to face millions of dollars in fines.
But US district Judge Pamela Chen, in a ruling issued late on Friday, said a May Supreme Court decision, meant that the convictions for wire fraud could not stand.
The Supreme Court reversed in May a wire fraud conviction of Joseph Percoco, a former aide to former New York City governor Andrew Cuomo.
"The Supreme Court's latest wire fraud decisions — especially Percoco — and the absence of precedent applying honest services wire fraud to foreign commercial bribery, requires this court to find that [the statute] does not criminalise the conduct alleged in this case and that therefore the evidence at trial was insufficient to sustain defendants’ convictions under that statute," Chen wrote in her decision.
"Defendants’ convictions for money laundering, predicated on their honest services wire fraud convictions, also cannot be sustained. The court therefore grants defendants’ motions to acquit on all counts of conviction," she added.
Before the conviction, the court had heard that the main beneficiaries of the kickback scheme were six of the most powerful men in South American football.
They included former CONMEBOL president Nicolás Leoz, who died in 2019, former Argentine football executive Julio Grondona, who died in 2014, and former Brazilian football chief Ricardo Teixeira.
– TIMES/AFP
related news
-
Spain recalls its ambassador to Argentina over Milei 'insult'
-
Milei denounces 'satanic' socialism during trip to Spain
-
Milei plans to meet with Mark Zuckerberg at end of May
-
Milei picks far-right rally over Spanish PM during Madrid visit
-
Javier Milei visits Spain without meeting the King or Pedro Sánchez
-
Another Spanish minister lets rip at Milei, accusing him of spreading hate
-
Milei heads to Madrid as star guest for Vox summit
-
River Plate secure qualification for 2025 Club World Cup
-
First 'extreme' solar storm in 20 years brings spectacular auroras to Ushuaia
-
Argentina shifts historic position on Palestine as UN member state