Blatter, Platini cleared of fraud in Swiss trial
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[July 08, 2022]
By John Revill
BELLINZONA, Switzerland (Reuters)
-Former FIFA President Sepp Blatter and France footballing legend
Michel Platini were both cleared of corruption charges by a Swiss
court on Friday.
Blatter, who led FIFA for 17 years, was cleared of fraud by the
Federal Criminal Court in the southern city of Bellinzona.
Platini, a former France national team captain and manager, was also
acquitted of fraud.
The two, once among the most powerful figures in global soccer, had
denied the charges against them. On Friday they joked and shook
hands before the judgment and looked relieved as the verdict was
read out.
Platini described his joy after the acquittal, saying the
allegations had turned him from a legend of world soccer to a
"devil".
"I want to express my happiness for all my loved ones that justice
has finally been done after seven years of lies and manipulation,"
Platini said in a statement.
"The truth has come to light during this trial," he added. "I kept
saying it: my fight is a fight against injustice. I won a first
game."
Prosecutors had accused Blatter, a Swiss who led global soccer body
FIFA for 17 years, and Platini of unlawfully arranging for FIFA to
pay the Frenchman two million Swiss francs ($2.06 million) in 2011.
The case meant Blatter ended his reign as FIFA president in disgrace
and it wrecked Platini's hopes of succeeding him after he was banned
from football when the affair came to light.
Blatter, 86, had said the two-million franc payment followed a
"gentlemen's agreement" between the pair when he asked Platini to be
his technical adviser in 1998.
Platini, 67, worked as a consultant between 1998 and 2002 with an
annual salary of 300,000 Swiss francs -- the most FIFA could afford
because of money troubles the organisation had at the time, Blatter
has told the court.
The rest of Platini's one million per year salary was to be settled
at a later date, Blatter said.
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Former UEFA President Michel Platini leaves the Swiss Federal
Criminal Court in Bellinzona, Switzerland June 9, 2022. REUTERS/Arnd
Wiegmann
The senior judge, Josephine Contu Albrizio, said a
verbal agreement between Blatter and Platini seemed credible, as did
the Frenchman's seeing his market value at 1 million per year due to
his status in the game.
It also seemed implausible that Platini would have worked only on
the basis of written contract that paid him such a paltry sum, the
judge told the court.
It was also credible that Platini sought the extra money only in
2010 as he did not need the money immediately.
The payment emerged following a huge investigation launched by the
U.S. Department of Justice into bribery, fraud and money-laundering
at FIFA in 2015, which triggered Blatter's resignation.
Both officials were banned in 2015 from soccer for eight years over
the payment, although their bans were later reduced. [L5N2XH0DW].
Platini, who also lost his job as UEFA president following the ban,
said the affair was a deliberate attempt to thwart his attempt to
become FIFA president in 2015.
Platini's former general secretary at UEFA, Gianni Infantino,
entered the FIFA race and won the election in 2016.
($1 = 0.9736 Swiss francs)
(Reporting by John Revill; editing by Clare Fallon and Michael
Shields and Christian Radnedge)
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