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FIFA hands down lifetime bans for bribed football officials

Trio includes former federation presidents

Wednesday, 22nd November 2017

Three football officials who pleaded guilty in American courts to accepting bribes have been banned for life by the FIFA ethics committee.

They include former FIFA audit committee member Richard Lai of Guam, who testified in federal court that the source of his bribe money was Olympic powerbroker Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahad al-Sabah of Kuwait.

"His guilty plea related, amongst others, to schemes in which he received bribes in exchange for his support in relation to the FIFA presidential elections and to gain control and influence within the AFC (Asian Football Confederation) and FIFA," the soccer body said Tuesday in a statement.

Sheikh Ahmad referred his own case to the ethics committees of FIFA and the International Olympic Committee in April after Lai's guilty plea was revealed.

The Kuwaiti royal also withdrew from an election to retain his seat representing Asia on the FIFA Council.

Two former football federation presidents, Rafael Esquivel of Venezuela and Julio Rocha of Nicaragua, were also banned for life.

They were arrested in Zurich in May 2015 in early morning raids on luxury hotels and later extradited to the United States.

FIFA said its ethics judges imposed "appropriate fines in relation to the amounts of the bribes that they have admitted having taken."

Lai has agreed to pay "more than US$1.1 million in forfeiture and penalties," the US Department of Justice said in April.

In court, the American citizen pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy charges related to taking about US$1 million in bribes, including at least US$850,000 from Kuwaiti officials.

Esquivel agreed to forfeit US$16 million a year ago when he pleaded guilty to charges of racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy linked to the awarding of contracts for the media and marketing rights.

Esquivel's name was cited Monday in Brooklyn during testimony in the trial of three other South American soccer officials who deny corruption charges.

One witness who formerly worked for a marketing agency in Argentina said he kept a ledger of payments to officials, including a US$750,000 payment to Esquivel for "Q2022”.

Prosecutors did not specify if the payment was linked to the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

Rocha was a FIFA staffer and was working for its development department when he was arrested in 2015. He agreed to forfeit nearly $300,000 after admitting to racketeering conspiracy and wire fraud conspiracy charges last December.

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