U.S. authorities are
hopeful that more of the former FIFA officials and marketing executives who
were indicted in May on bribery and corruption charges could soon be extradited
to New York, a prosecutor said on Friday.
Speaking during a hearing
in Brooklyn federal court in the case of former FIFA Vice President Jeffrey
Webb, prosecutor Evan Norris said discussions were ongoing with lawyers for
"a number of other defendants overseas" regarding their possible
extradition to face the charges.
Only three of the 14
people indicted in the sweeping investigation of international soccer and its
governing bodies are currently in the United States. Six are in Switzerland,
two are in Argentina, one is in Brazil, one is in Paraguay and one is in Trinidad.
World soccer was thrown
into turmoil in May when U.S. authorities announced the indictment, saying the
14 men corrupted the sport by agreeing to more than $150 million in bribes and
kickbacks for media and marketing rights.
U.S. authorities say
their investigation, which is continuing, has exposed complex money laundering
schemes, millions of dollars in untaxed incomes and tens of millions of dollars
in offshore accounts held by FIFA officials.
After agreeing to be
extradited from Switzerland, Webb, a Cayman Islands national, pleaded not
guilty last month to charges that he solicited bribes from sports marketing
companies in exchange for the commercial rights to soccer matches.(Reuters)
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