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Qatar World Cup 2022 investigation: former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner and family paid millions

Dharmabum

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Aug 16, 2003
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/fo...ent-Jack-Warner-and-family-paid-millions.html

Qatar World Cup 2022 investigation: former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner and family paid millions
Documents appear to show a senior Fifa official and his family were paid millions by a company controlled by a former Qatari football official shortly after the country won its bid for the 2022 World Cup


By Claire Newell, Holly Watt, Claire Duffin, Ben Bryant, Alastair Good (video)

10:00PM GMT 17 Mar 2014


A senior Fifa official and his family were paid almost $2 million (£1.2m) from a Qatari firm linked to the country’s successful bid for the 2022 World Cup, The Telegraph can disclose.

Jack Warner, the former vice-president of Fifa, appears to have been personally paid $1.2 million (£720,000) from a company controlled by a former Qatari football official shortly after the decision to award the country the tournament.

Payments totalling almost $750,000 (£450,000) were made to Mr Warner’s sons, documents show. A further $400,000 (£240,000) was paid to one of his employees.

It is understood that the FBI is now investigating Trinidad-based Mr Warner and his alleged links to the Qatari bid, and that the former Fifa official’s eldest son, who lives in Miami, has been helping the inquiry as a co-operating witness.

The awarding of the 2022 World Cup to Qatar was one of the most controversial decisions in sporting history. The intense summer heat in the desert nation has raised the prospect of the tournament being moved to the winter for the first time.

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Although Qatar has repeatedly denied wrongdoing during the bidding process, it has long been suspected that the decision was flawed, and several members of the Fifa committee have faced corruption allegations.

It can be disclosed that a company owned by Mohamed Bin Hammam, the Fifa executive member for Qatar, appeared to pay $1.2 million (£720,000) to Mr Warner in 2011.

A note from one of Mr Warner’s companies, Jamad, to Mr Bin Hammam’s firm, Kemco, requested $1.2 million in payment for work carried out between 2005 and 2010.



The document is dated December 15, 2010, two weeks after Qatar won the right to host the tournament, and states that the money is “payable to Jack Warner”.

Mr Warner’s two sons and an employee were paid a further $1 million (£600,000) by the same Qatari company.

One document states that payments are to “offset legal and other expenses”, but a separate letter claims that more than $1 million cover “professional services provided over the period 2005-2010”.

At least one bank in the Cayman Islands initially refused to process the payment amid fears over the legality of the money transfer. The money was eventually processed via a bank in New York – a transaction that is understood to have come to the attention of the FBI. A well-placed source said: “These payments need to be properly investigated. The World Cup is the most important event in football and we need to be confident that decisions have been made for the right reasons. There are lots of questions that still need to be answered.”
Mr Warner was one of the most experienced members of the executive committee until he stood down in 2011 and served as vice-president of the organisation for 14 years. He was one of the 22 people who decided to award Russia the 2018 World Cup and Qatar the 2022 tournament. It is understood that the FBI is investigating payments to Mr Warner and that one of his family members has been acting as a “co-operating witness”.

The investigators are thought to be focusing on Mr Warner’s American and Grand Cayman accounts.

Michael Garcia, the joint chief investigator of Fifa’s ethics committee, is also investigating irregularities surrounding the bidding process. He is expected to deliver his report to the committee later this year.

The disclosures will add to concerns that some Fifa executive committee members were not impartial when they cast their votes in December 2010. England suffered a humiliating defeat when it secured only two votes to host the 2018 World Cup and was eliminated after the first round.



Even before the decision was made, there were persistent allegations of corruption. Six weeks before the vote in Zurich, a World Cup official was caught in an undercover investigation agreeing to sell his vote to one of England’s rivals. A second member of the same committee was recorded asking for £1.5 million for a sports academy. Both officials were suspended, meaning that 22 people voted instead of the usual 24.

A whistleblower also claimed that one of the bidders had bought the votes of three African executive committee members. The former Fifa employee later withdrew the allegations.

Following England’s defeat, a parliamentary committee held an inquiry into the failed bid. Lord Triesman, the bid’s former chairman, gave evidence stating that four Fifa executive committee members had asked for business deals and favours when negotiating their support. One of those he named was Mr Warner.



The Labour peer said that the then Fifa vice-president had asked for money to build an education centre in Trinidad, with the cash to be channelled through him, and £500,000 to buy World Cup television rights for Haiti.

In June 2011, Mr Warner resigned from all football posts after he was accused of facilitating bribes to members of the Caribbean football union on behalf of Mohamed Bin Hammam, who was standing against Sepp Blatter to be Fifa president. A report by the Fifa ethics committee found that there was “compelling” evidence that Mr Warner was “an accessory to corruption”.

Mr Warner was caught on tape apparently urging fellow Fifa officials to accept cash gifts from Mr Bin Hammam, the disgraced former presidential candidate.

The documents seen by The Telegraph raise further questions about Mr Warner’s activities. One email, which appears to have been sent by one of Mr Warner’s employees, shows that the staff member personally received $412,000 from the Qatari company and that Mr Warner’s son, Daryll, was paid $432,000. Daryan, his other son, was paid $316,000 via a company called We Buy Houses.

Regarding the payments to Daryan, the email states that he was “contracted … based on his understanding, contacts and history with the regional players who make up an integral part of the defence team … pursuant to Fifa bribery allegations. As stated in our letter of June 11, 2011, the value of US $316,000, and this is an initial deposit to offset legal and other expenses related to the matter.”

In July, a different email shows that “monies in the amount of $1.2 million” were wire transferred to J&D International, another of Mr Warner’s companies, by the same Qatari firm. It states that this is to “offset legal and other related expenses associated with regard to an ongoing matter”.

Mr Warner and his family declined to comment. A spokesman for Qatar’s 2022 World Cup organising committee said: “The 2022 bid committee strictly adhered to Fifa’s bidding regulations in compliance with their code of ethics.

“The supreme committee for delivery and legacy and the individuals involved in the 2022 bid committee are unaware of any allegations surrounding business dealings between private individuals.”
 

Geyzer Soze

Fearlessly the idiot faced the crowd
Aug 16, 2010
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f_c16e14ecca.jpg
 

Spurger King

can't smile without glue
Jul 22, 2008
43,881
95,149
I really am on the verge of giving up on football. It's not a sport these days, it's just a massive money laundering racket.
 

LeSoupeKitchen

Well-Known Member
Aug 18, 2011
3,114
7,643
I really am on the verge of giving up on football. It's not a sport these days, it's just a massive money laundering racket.

If you haven't given up by now I don't think you ever will. Now I've survived losing all our best players, missing out on CL due to Chelsea, Qatar getting the WC (it was obvious it was bribery before this article), players getting away with racism with club backing, cole shooting a work experience kid, Blatter, shocking ref & FA decisions, admission by premier league chief that its in their interest for Man U to do well etc etc etc - I know I'll never stop watching this toxic sport.
 

Spurger King

can't smile without glue
Jul 22, 2008
43,881
95,149
If you haven't given up by now I don't think you ever will. Now I've survived losing all our best players, missing out on CL due to Chelsea, Qatar getting the WC (it was obvious it was bribery before this article), players getting away with racism with club backing, cole shooting a work experience kid, Blatter, shocking ref & FA decisions, admission by premier league chief that its in their interest for Man U to do well etc etc etc - I know I'll never stop watching this toxic sport.

Not so sure. A few years ago I couldn't imagine missing a single England game - Friendly, Qualifier, whatever. I'd go out of my way to go to Wembley or watch the game down the pub. Now I doubt I'll even bother watching the England games in the World Cup as I just consider it to be a team full of incredibly dislikeable people.

I've never felt as detached from Spurs as I do these days, and I think a large part of my love for football died when Oil Money and the Chavs won the Prem and Champions League respectively. I watch our games out of habit more than anything, but it's starting to feel like a weekly waste of 2 hours I could be using to do something more productive.
 

ExpatFan

Well-Known Member
May 11, 2005
1,879
1,681
I've never felt as detached from Spurs as I do these days, and I think a large part of my love for football died when Oil Money and the Chavs won the Prem and Champions League respectively. I watch our games out of habit more than anything, but it's starting to feel like a weekly waste of 2 hours I could be using to do something more productive.
Agree with every word of this mate.
 

Macspur261

Active Member
Oct 2, 2013
738
1,084
From The Daily Mash.
Makes as much sense as holding a World Cup there !


QATAR has won out in a bid to host the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Despite having zero snowfall, no ski slopes or winter sports facilities of any kind, International Olympic Committee president Thomas Bach described Qatar’s bid as a “triumph of the optimism of the human spirit”.

He said it was high time a major winter sporting event was hosted in the Middle East, blaming anti-Arab prejudice for resistance to the idea.

The Emir of Qatar said: “We shall encase the entire country in a gigantic, temperature-controlled ice dome.

“Then Nepalese workers with chainsaws will dismantle the top half of Mount Everest section-by-section and drag it to Qatar on massive sledges.

“There is a small chance that these plans may fall through. However, we have back-up plans – traditional winter sports could be replaced with new events such as dune luge, sand hurling and flogging.”

The IOC decision has not been met with universal approval, especially after several players drowned during an open air exhibition ice hockey tournament in Doha.
 
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