FIFA Executive committee members among 16 indicted in U.S. probe

WASHINGTON -- Five current and former members of FIFA's ruling executive committee are among 16 additional men who've been indicted on corruption charges. It's part of a widening investigation by U.S. prosecutors into soccer corruption.

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Two men were led away by Swiss federal police in a pre-dawn raid today at a Zurich hotel. They were the president of the South American soccer confederation, Juan Angel Napout of Paraguay, and Alfredo Hawit, a Honduran who heads the North and Central American and Caribbean governing body.

The action came just before FIFA's Executive Committee unanimously approved a set of reforms bringing changes to the way it governs. "These reforms are moving FIFA towards improved governance, greater transparency and more accountability." A statement on their website read.

Ten current and former members of FIFA's executive committee have now been charged.

Among the other regional officials indicted are Ricardo Teixeira, an ex-Brazilian federation head and former son-in-law of Joao Havelange, who was FIFA's president from 1974-98; Marco Polo del Nero, president of the Brazilian football federation; recently resigned CONMEBOL Secretary General Jose Luis Meiszner; Manuel Burga, a former Peruvian soccer federation president; and Luis Chiriboga, president of the Ecuadorean federation and a member of CONMEBOL's executive committee.

Also indicted was Carlos Chavez, CONMEBOL's former treasurer and the president of the Bolivian Football Federation. Chavez was jailed in July on charges arising from a separate investigation - that he diverted funds from a charity match.

By now, most of CONMEBOL's top past and present officials are involved in the scandal. While some have been arrested, others have abruptly resigned from the national federations that make up the regional body, and are reportedly collaborating with U.S. authorities in exchange for a reduced sentence.

"It's a real shame what is happening to our soccer," Marco Ortega, the acting president of the Bolivian federation told The Associated Press. "Falling to this level is too much, but it also vindicates us because when we fired Carlos Chavez, the shameless CONMEBOL tried to protect him. Today, we know that the leadership at CONMEBOL is neither credible nor respectable."

The power vacuum has left CONMEBOL third vice president Wilmar Valdez as next in line to be president.

"Right now there's a lot of confusion about the management of the institution," an official at CONMEBOL said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly. "We're worried because there are several financial commitments that CONMEBOL must meet that need the accredited signature of the president."

In May, former presidents Nicolas Leoz and Eugenio Figueredo were indicted by the U.S. Department of State. They were among 14 soccer officials and businessmen wanted on charges of bribery, racketeering, and money laundering. Their extradition is being sought.

"CONMEBOL and CONCACAF are both in serious difficulty as there are no viable leaders, and most officials that work within the organizations will be somehow associated to those arrested, so there is perhaps no 'clean' person to turn to," said Christopher Gaffney, a scholar at the University of Zurich who studies soccer and mega-events.

"We knew that the CONMEBOL figures in particular, who come from corrupt and opaque national federations such as (Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay), would not have much incentive to clean up their operations," Gaffney said.

Last month, Sergio Jadue, the president of Chile's federation, resigned and traveled to the U.S. after he refused to answer questions from the federation over his possible links to the corruption scandal at FIFA. Local media reported he struck a deal with the FBI.

Chilean state TV aired images last week of Jadue walking the streets of Miami Beach, Florida, in sandals, a T-shirt, and shorts. He was not guarded by police or bodyguards, and he was not visibly wearing an ankle bracelet. He declined to speak on camera.

Jadue declared his innocence right after the FIFA scandal broke in May even though he was not formally charged in the U.S. Justice Department indictments. Without specifying them by name, the indictments said most presidents of the 10 South American federations would receive $1.5 million in bribes from marketing company Datisa in exchange for control of the Copa America.

Jadue's exit in November came days after the resignation of the head of Colombia's federation, Luis Bedoya. Both have been vice presidents of CONMEBOL, but they were not among the soccer executives named in the U.S. probe. Colombian prosecutors have said, however, that they are investigating financial transactions by Bedoya, and have requested information from U.S. authorities.

Meanwhile, Chile's soccer federation was raided on Thursday by the Chilean equivalent of the FBI. Police said Jadue is being investigated for alleged money laundering and that the Chilean federation is being probed for allegedly funneling its money to hire lawyers in the U.S.

"The way in which global soccer is run is simply not transparent," Gaffney said. "And because FIFA prevents governments from 'interfering' in federations, there is virtually no way to have strong governmental reforms implemented from the outside."

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