Sports & Fitness

Swiss prosecutors appeal Blatter, Platini acquittal in FIFA fraud trial

Attorney-General’s Office has applied for ‘full annulment’ of first-instance judgment

Updated 3 years ago · Published on 20 Oct 2022 1:59PM

Swiss prosecutors appeal Blatter, Platini acquittal in FIFA fraud trial
Former world and European football chiefs Sepp Blatter (left) and Michel Platini, have been cleared on July 8 by the Federal Criminal Court in a trial following a mammoth investigation that began in 2015. – AFP pic, October 20, 2022

GENEVA – Swiss prosecutors said today that they had filed an appeal against the acquittal of former football chiefs Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini over a suspected fraudulent payment.

Blatter and Platini, once the chiefs of world and European football respectively, were cleared on July 8 by the Federal Criminal Court in a trial following a mammoth investigation that began in 2015.

The Switzerland Attorney-General’s Office said that it had filed the appeal before the deadline was reached yesterday night, confirming a report in L’Equipe.

Switzerland’s top prosecutor “has applied for the full annulment of the first-instance judgment,” a spokeswoman for the office said in an email.

The prosecutors reportedly had 20 days to make their intentions clear after the reception of the full verdict from the Federal Criminal Court, based in the southern city of Bellinzona, on September 29.

Former FIFA president Blatter, 86, and Platini, 67, were cleared of the allegations that shook world football and torpedoed their time at the top.

The Federal Criminal Court rejected the prosecution’s request for a suspended prison sentence of a year and eight months.

The trial revolved around payment for Platini’s work as an adviser to Blatter between 1998 and 2002.

Platini was accused of having submitted to FIFA in 2011 an allegedly fictitious invoice for a claimed debt still outstanding for his advisory work.

They signed a contract in 1999 for an annual remuneration of CHF300,000 (RM1.4 million), which was paid in full by FIFA.

But the pair were tried over a CHF2 million payment in 2011 to Platini, who was then in charge of European football’s governing body UEFA.

Blatter told the court the pair had actually struck a “gentleman’s agreement” for Platini to be paid CHF1 million a year.

Both were accused of fraud and forgery of a document. Blatter was accused of misappropriation and criminal mismanagement, while Platini was accused of participating in those offences.

The court concluded that fraud was “not established with a likelihood bordering on certainty”, and therefore applied the general principle of criminal law according to which “the doubt must benefit the accused”. – AFP, October 20, 2022

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