The body that governs soccer, the most popular sport in the world, is a multibillion-dollar behemoth.
Great power, yes. Great responsibility? Not so much, critics say.
FIFA
has been regularly accused of bribery and kickbacks, allegations that
reached a fever pitch after it awarded Russia and Qatar the World Cup in
2018 and 2022, respectively.
Afterward, the group carried out its own internal investigation and cleared itself.
So why is the United States, a country where soccer ranks far below football and basketball in popularity, now taking top FIFA officials to court?
In order to understand that, we'll have to take you through a journey that, as you'll see, involves Americans at all stages.
Michael Garcia:
The World Cup is a big deal. It comes around every four years, and when it does, it's the biggest sporting spectacle on the planet.
When
FIFA awarded the 2018 games to Russia and followed that with the even
more head-scratching choice of Qatar in 2022, critics and other
governments cried foul. They smelled shenanigans. They wanted a
transparent account of the bidding process to see if Qatar and Russia
cut any corners.
FIFA brought in
Michael Garcia, a onetime U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New
York. He was tasked with looking into the behavior of the two nations.
He spent 19 months scrutinizing the bids to host the two tournaments.
By the time he was done, his findings stretched to 350 pages.
So what did FIFA do?
It suppressed the report, released a puny 42-page summary -- and cleared itself of any wrongdoing in November.
Garcia hit back. He labeled FIFA's findings on his report "incomplete and erroneous."
CONCACAF:
The U.S. is part of CONCACAF, the FIFA-affiliated governing body for North America and the Caribbean.
Blazer
was the No. 2 man there. And with him as a cooperating witness,
American officials set out to see whether corruption touched tournaments
held in the Americas.
Federal investigators in the United States say they think it did.
One of the people facing charges now is Jeffrey Webb. He's the FIFA vice president, and he also heads CONCACAF.
Prosecutors said those arrested accepted bribes and kickbacks totaling more than $100 million, from the early 1990s until now.
In return, they provided media, marketing and sponsorship rights to soccer matches in the Americas.
But can the U.S. actually go after FIFA officials?
The United States of America:
The United States brought charges against the suspects because the plots were allegedly hatched on American soil.
"According
to U.S. request, these crimes were agreed and prepared in the U.S., and
payments were carried out via U.S. banks," the Swiss Office of Justice
said.
Prosecutors also say they think the broad reach of U.S. tax and banking regulations aid their ability to bring the charges.
In
addition, U.S. authorities claim jurisdiction because the American
television market, and billions paid by U.S. networks, is the largest
for the World Cup.
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