USA submit formal request to extradite seven Fifa officials over corruption scandal

The United States have submitted a formal request for Switzerland to extradite seven Fifa officials arrested in Zurich as part of a corruption probe that has rocked football’s world governing body.

Fifa vice president Jeffrey Webb, third from the right, is among the seven people the USA have requested for extradition.
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GENEVA // The United States have submitted a formal request for Switzerland to extradite seven Fifa officials arrested in Zurich as part of a corruption probe that has rocked football’s world governing body.

Switzerland’s Federal Office of Justice said that the requests were received from the US embassy at Bern.

The requests submitted late Wednesday met a 40-day deadline since the seven were detained on May 27 in raids on a luxury hotel in Fifa’s home city.

All seven men detained at Zurich, including three current and former members of Fifa’s executive committee, have already objected to extradition.

They face around 20 years in prison.

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The widening American investigation already alleges bribery and racketeering worth more than US$150 million (Dh551m) involving high-ranking Fifa officials over a 24-year span. The US Department of Justice published an indictment of 14 football and marketing officials in May that alleged bribery linked to awarding broadcast rights for international tournaments in North and South America.

“These crimes are thought to have been agreed and prepared in the USA, and payments were allegedly routed through US banks,” the Swiss justice ministry said in a statement.

The seven will be heard by Zurich police and granted a 14-day period to respond to federal officials about the extradition request, the Swiss justice ministry said.

Swiss justice officials will then rule “within a few weeks” on whether to extradite them. That ruling can be appealed to Switzerland’s top criminal court and supreme court.

The seven men include Fifa vice president Jeffrey Webb of the Cayman Islands and Eugenio Figueredo of Uruguay, who was arrested two days before his Fifa vice presidential term expired.

Costa Rican football federation president Eduardo Li was arrested two days before he was due to formally join Fifa’s executive committee.

Former Brazilian federation chief Jose Maria Marin is a member of the Fifa panel organising the men’s and women’s tournaments at next year’s Olympic Games.

The others are Venezuela FA chief Rafael Esquivel; Fifa staffer Julio Rocha, a development officer from Nicaragua; and Costas Takkas, a Briton who works for Concacaf president Webb.

The other seven men among the 14 indicted include disgraced former Fifa vice president Jack Warner of Trinidad and Tobago, and former Fifa executive committee member Nicolas Leoz of Paraguay, the longtime former president of South American governing body Conmebol.

A further four men have entered guilty pleas which were unsealed in May. They include American former Fifa executive panel member Chuck Blazer and two sons of Warner.

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