Michael Lauber told journalists he would not rule out interviewing
FIFA President Sepp Blatter and General Secretary Jerome Valcke,
though no individuals were being targeted at the moment.
"Our investigation is of great complexity and quite substantial," he
said in his first public comments since his office seized FIFA
computer data last month.
"So far our investigative team obtained evidence concerning 104
banking relations (relationships between banks and clients). And be
aware that every banking relation represents several bank accounts,"
Lauber added in Berne.
Sepp Blatter announced he planned to step down as the head of the
Swiss-based organization earlier this month as U.S. and Swiss
authorities widened their investigations.
Switzerland is particularly focused on the allocation of the 2018
and 2022 World Cups respectively to Russia and Qatar.
Asked whether the Swiss investigation could derail Russia's plans,
Lauber said that decision was not his problem.
He said that transactions investigators were looking at included 53
which had been flagged in suspicious activity reports by
Switzerland's Financial Intelligence Unit, an anti-money laundering
agency.
Lauber added that his office had seized nine terabytes of data. By
comparison, the U.S. Library of Congress has published estimates on
its website that its entire collection of printed works amounts to
10 terabytes.
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Lauber said his work was completely independent of ongoing
investigations in the United States. While Switzerland had received
and fulfilled a request for legal assistance from the United States,
Switzerland had not asked for any such help in return, he added.
Lauber also said that while his investigation was looking closely at
investigative materials generated by Michael Garcia, an American
lawyer hired by FIFA as a special ethics investigator, the United
States had not requested a copy of Garcia's report.
Lauber declined to offer a timetable for developments in his
investigation.
"I don't care about the timetable of FIFA, I only care about my own
timetable," Lauber told journalists.
He said he had no complaints about FIFA's cooperation to date.
(Additional reporting by Katharina Bart; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
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