Prosecutors
seek Swiss help in German World Cup tax case
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[December 16, 2015]
ZURICH (Reuters) - German
prosecutors have asked Switzerland, home country of soccer world
governing body FIFA, to help look into a suspicious payment linked to
Germany's hosting of the 2006 World Cup, including by sifting through
bank data.
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The Frankfurt state prosecutor has sought legal assistance over a
6.7 million euro ($7.3 million) transfer from Germany's DFB football
association to soccer's world governing body, both authorities said
on Wednesday.
In November, police and tax investigators raided DFB headquarters
and searched the homes of officials to investigate suspected tax
evasion linked to the awarding of the tournament.
At the heart of the investigation is the 2005 payment from the DFB
that Der Spiegel magazine alleged was a return of a loan from
then-Adidas CEO Robert-Louis Dreyfus to help buy votes for Germany's
successful World Cup bid in 2000 at a FIFA ballot.
Swiss authorities are separately reviewing 133 reports of suspicious
financial activity linked to FIFA's awarding of the 2018 and 2022
World Cups to Russia and Qatar - among a raft of corruption
allegations engulfing the sport.
Former DFB President Wolfgang Niersbach, his predecessor Theo
Zwanziger and the association's former general secretary, Horst
Schmidt -- who all held senior positions on the 2006 organizing
committee -- are suspected of tax evasion over the German payment,
prosecutors have said.
The DFB and Niersbach, plus then-organizing chief Franz Beckenbauer,
rejected the votes-for-cash accusations, whereas Zwanziger has said
the slush fund allegations were true and that Niersbach clearly knew
about the fund, without providing information on his own knowledge
of the affair.
Niersbach, who resigned over the scandal, has said an internal
investigation was under way to find out why the amount was paid to
FIFA and what was it used for.
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Asked at a news conference on Oct. 22 why the DFB had paid FIFA the
amount, he replied: "I don't know."
Switzerland was asked to conduct various investigations relating to
the transaction and tax evasion case, including investigating Swiss
bank data, Frankfurt's senior public prosecutor Nadja Niesen, said.
She was confirming a report by the Swiss paper NZZ.
Switzerland's Office of the Attorney General said it would treat the
German request as a priority, but declined to comment on its content
or potential outcome.
(Reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi; Editing by Alison Williams)
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