A Swiss special prosecutor has launched criminal proceedings against FIFA president Gianni Infantino, authorities in Switzerland said Thursday, as part of an investigation into suspected collusion between him and the country’s Attorney General, Michael Lauber.
In a statement,
authorities said special prosecutor Stefan Keller “has reached the conclusion
that…there are indications of criminal conduct” in relation to meetings
between Infantino, Lauber and another official, Rinaldo Arnold.
“This concerns abuse
of public office, breach of official secrecy, assisting offenders and
incitement to these acts,” the authorities said.
Infantino has not
denied that the meetings took place and continued to defend his actions.
“To meet with the
Attorney General of Switzerland is perfectly legitimate and it’s perfectly
legal,” he said in a statement released by FIFA.
“It’s no violation
of anything. On the contrary, it is also part of the fiduciary duties of the
president of FIFA.”
Lauber resigned
last week over his handling of a corruption investigation targeting world
football’s troubled governing body.
Infantino and
Lauber are said to have held a series of meetings in 2016 and 2017.
Two such meetings
were initially exposed in 2018 by “Football Leaks”, a cross-border
investigation by several European news organisations.
Like Infantino,
Lauber has denied any wrongdoing.
Lauber was in
charge of Switzerland’s probe into the corruption scandal that exploded at the
heart of FIFA in 2015.
The scandal erupted
when Swiss police in May that year raided a luxury hotel in Zurich before dawn,
arresting a number of top football officials.
The Swiss judiciary
under Lauber quickly opened criminal proceedings against then-FIFA president
Sepp Blatter and other top officials.
Blatter was
eventually removed in 2015 and Infantino took over as FIFA president in 2016.
“It has been my aim
from day one, and it remains my aim, to assist the authorities with
investigating past wrongdoings at FIFA,” Infantino insisted.
“FIFA officials
have met with prosecutors in other jurisdictions across the world for exactly
these purposes.
“People have been
convicted and sentenced, thanks to FIFA’s cooperation, and especially in the
United States of America, where our cooperation has resulted in over 40
criminal convictions.
“Therefore, I
remain fully supportive of the judicial process, and FIFA remains willing to
fully cooperate with the Swiss authorities for these purposes.”
Lauber, 54, has
denied accusations that he lied about the meetings but is also under criminal
investigation.
A Swiss
parliamentary commission decided in May to open proceedings against Lauber over
“well-founded suspicion of serious violation of the duties of office either
intentionally or by gross negligence”, which risked seeing him sacked.
Previously Lauber
had been docked five percent of his salary—reduced from eight percent on appeal—following
a disciplinary probe which found that he had repeatedly lied when questions
were raised about the FIFA investigation.
Arnold, meanwhile,
is a childhood friend of Infantino’s who went on to become a senior prosecutor
in Switzerland’s Haut-Valais region where they grew up.
In April a Swiss
newspaper, the Tribune de Geneve, alleged that Infantino wrote to Arnold
after becoming “worried” about an investigation into him by the country’s
Office of the Attorney General (OAG) in relation to his awarding of a
television rights contract to an offshore company in his previous role as UEFA’s
legal affairs director.
FIFA responded to
that report by saying that emails referred to in the newspaper’s article were “obviously
obtained by hacking, which is an illegal and criminal act.”