Sepp Blatter, Michel Platini Lose FIFA Ban Appeals, As Scandal Rumbles On

by

Nov 18, 2015

GENEVA — Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini lost their appeals Wednesday against interim 90-day bans for financial wrongdoing in the growing corruption scandal that has shaken world soccer.

Platini’s lawyer said FIFA had “perverted its own rules,” and taken more than two weeks to notify him of a FIFA appeals committee verdict that was dated Nov. 3 — further stalling the former France great’s FIFA presidential bid.

“It’s crystal clear that this staggering delay is the result of an instrumentation aiming at holding back Michel Platini,” Paris-based lawyer Thibaud d’Ales told The Associated Press in a telephone interview.

The provisional ban stops Platini from working as UEFA president and halts his candidacy for the Feb. 26 FIFA election. Blatter is also barred from his FIFA presidential office.

Blatter’s American lawyer said the FIFA head was “disappointed” by the ruling, and called the lost time in publishing the ruling “inexplicable.”

“President Blatter is committed to clearing his name and hopes this inexplicable delay is not an effort to deny him, during his elected term, a fair hearing before a neutral body,” Richard Cullen said in a statement.

The rejection of their legal challenges was expected from the appeals panel — chaired by Larry Mussenden, the former attorney general of Bermuda — which rarely overturns judgments by FIFA judicial bodies.

Platini and Blatter will now file further appeals to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, where appellants can choose one of the three lawyers to judge their case.

The bans were imposed last month by FIFA’s ethics committee pending full investigations into a $2 million payment Blatter approved for Platini in 2011 as backdated salary. Platini was employed by Blatter as a presidential adviser from 1998 to 2002.

Both men deny wrongdoing, though they have acknowledged there was no written contract for the extra salary.

Blatter and Platini are expected to appear before FIFA ethics judge Joachim Eckert in December and face lengthy bans if misconduct is found proven.

Thumbnail photo via Twitter/@TeleFootball

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