Brazil police arrest Olympic committee chief in vote-buying scandal
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[October 06, 2017]
By Pedro Fonseca
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - The
Brazilian police on Thursday arrested the head of the national
Olympics committee, who is accused of arranging more than $2 million
in bribes to get the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to pick
Rio de Janeiro as host of the 2016 games.
Carlos Arthur Nuzman, 75, was taken into custody along with Leonardo
Gryner, a former director of the national Olympics committee, the
police said. Both men face allegations including corruption and
money laundering.
After police raided Nuzman's home in September, they accused him of
paying a $2 million bribe to the son of Lamine Diack, a former IOC
member from Senegal. Both Diack and his son have denied the
allegations
In a news conference following Nuzman's arrest, federal prosecutor
Fabiana Schneider said the investigation had uncovered evidence
Nuzman paid an additional $450,000 to $500,000 to secure the games.
Marcelo Bretas, the federal judge who authorized the arrests, said
the new evidence indicated that Nuzman's role in the alleged
vote-buying scheme was "more relevant" than previously thought.
Nelio Machado, a lawyer for Nuzman, told reporters the vote-buying
accusations were unfounded. The name of Gryner's attorney was not
immediately available.
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Brazilian Olympic Committee (COB) President Carlos Arthur Nuzman
arrives to Federal Police headquarters in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
October 5, 2017. REUTERS/Bruno Kelly
In an arrest order, Bretas said Nuzman's wealth grew by 416 percent
between 2006 and 2016 and that he had assets overseas that were only
declared after the vote-buying investigation began. The assets
include 16 kg in gold bars deposited in Switzerland, Bretas said.
"While Olympic athletes fought for the dream of winning a gold
medal, managers tucked away gold in Switzerland," Schneider said.
The IOC, which is conducting its own internal probe, said in a
statement it would cooperate in the Brazilian investigation
following news of Nuzman's arrest.
"Given the new facts, the IOC Ethics Commission may consider
provisional measures while respecting Mr. Nuzman’s right to be
heard," the IOC said, without detailing the measures.
(Reporting by Pedro Fonseca; Writing by Ana Mano; Editing by Susan
Thomas and Lisa Shumaker)
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