Lawyers
CONCACAF
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Former FIFA official Alfredo Hawit admitted to having received bribes for the sale of marketing rights to soccer tournaments. -
Former soccer executive Costa Takkas pleaded not guilty in U.S court
Former soccer executive, Costa Takkas, has pleaded not guilty of charges of bribery schemes. Takkas was the former secretary-general of the Cayman Island Football Association. -
CONCACAF settles lawsuit against US travel company Cartan
CONCACAF alleged a US travel company of overcharging for services as part of a kickback scheme. But then, it has settled the lawsuit against the US travel company after they allegedly paid off ex-president Jeffrey Webb. -
Former FIFA VP Pleads Not Guilty to Bribe Case
Alfredo Hawit has pleaded not guilty to the bribery charge filed against him. Ex-FIFA Vice President, Alfredo Hawit, recently pleaded not guilty in front of a judge in a federal courthouse in Brooklyn. -
Ex-FIFA official Webb pleads not guilty to U.S. charges
Jeffrey Webb, one of seven high-ranking officials of soccer's world governing body FIFA who were arrested in Switzerland on corruption charges, pleaded not guilty in U.S. federal court on Saturday. -
United States asks Swiss to extradite seven in FIFA inquiry
The United States has asked Switzerland to extradite seven FIFA officials arrested in an investigation into a global bribery scandal at soccer's governing body, the Swiss Federal Office of Justice (FOJ) said on Thursday. -
BBC says it has seen documents detailing Warner transactions
The British Broadcasting Corp claims to have seen evidence detailing what happened to the $10 million soccer's world governing body FIFA sent to former vice-president Jack Warner. -
FIFA scandal deepens as Blatter aide linked to payments
U.S. prosecutors believe FIFA President Sepp Blatter's top lieutenant made $10 million in bank transactions that are central to the bribery investigation of the world soccer body, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday. -
Global soccer officials arrested in U.S., Swiss corruption cases
Swiss police arrested some of the most powerful figures in global soccer on Wednesday, announcing a criminal investigation into the awarding of the next two world cups and plunging the world's most popular sport into turmoil. -
FIFA ethics investigator Garcia resigns in protest
FIFA ethics investigator Michael Garcia resigned on Wednesday in protest at the way his report into allegations of corruption in awarding the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments to Russia and Qatar was handled by the soccer governing body's ethics judge.
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