FIFA released secretary general Jerome Valcke from his duties on
Thursday following allegations that he took part in a deal to sell 2014
World Cup tickets well above face value.
In a statement, FIFA said Valcke "has been put on leave and released from his duties effective immediately until further notice.
"Further,
FIFA has been made aware of a series of allegations involving the
Secretary General and has requested a formal investigation by the FIFA
Ethics Committee."
It was unclear who made the decision to suspend
Valcke, who is Blatter's personal choice as his right-hand man at FIFA
headquarters. The ethics committee declined to confirm if an
investigation of Valcke is ongoing.
"The panel points out that --
as a matter of principle -- it will analyze all information that is
brought to its attention of its own accord,'' it said in a statement.
Valcke
was due to step down in February alongside his mentor Blatter. The
55-year-old Frenchman's main duty is overseeing organisation of the
world's most-watched sports event, which earned FIFA around $5 billion
for the 2014 tournament in Brazil.
FIFA's announcement came hours after a former FIFA ticketing partner made allegations about selling top-tier World Cup tickets above face value. The Guardian reported before FIFA's statement that Valcke had denied wrongdoing.
Benny
Alon, a former player who worked for a Swiss company called JB Sports
Marketing, released emails and a contract to 10 newspapers across the
world, detailing an alleged deal with FIFA in which World Cup tickets
would have been sold at three or four times face value.
The Israeli-American also made an unproven allegation that Valcke had been prepared to profit personally from the deal.
The
contract, signed by Valcke in 2010, gave JB Sports Marketing tickets to
12 of the tournament's elite matches while also forcing them to buy
tickets to the 12 least-appealing matches, for which they would not be
able to sell tickets at a profit. JB Sports received 8,750 tickets for
the best seats for each World Cup from 2010 to 2018.
According
to the emails, Valcke learned in April 2013 that tickets were being
resold well above their initial price -- against Brazilian law -- but
the contract was not revised until eight months later.
The deal
collapsed after Valcke realised that FIFA already had a contract with
another company, Match, to provide officially licensed hospitality for
the games. The emails say Valcke told Alon to deal with Match instead of
FIFA.
"You, we, have no choice," Valcke allegedly wrote in
December 2013. "Otherwise the deal will be canceled by FIFA or we all
face as individuals criminal offense. It is not a joke. It is very
serious.
"So avoid too many advice. Just do it if I may say using a
slogan from one company involved. All is clear and has to be finalized
now. Thanks. Jerome."
But by that time Alon had already sold tickets that he never received from FIFA.
Alon
told Valcke that 50 tickets for a knockout-stage match with a face
value of $230 sold for $1,300 each. And 600 tickets for Germany's
first-round game sold for three times their face value of $190, for a
total profit of $114,000 on each of Germany's games.
"We are doing better [than] the NY Stock Exchange," Alon wrote.
Valcke rose to the top administrative job at FIFA soon after being
fired in 2006 during a scandal. As marketing director, he was implicated
in misleading World Cup sponsor Mastercard during contract renewal
talks.
FIFA and Blatter eventually signed with Visa, provoking a
legal suit from Mastercard which football's governing body settled for
$90 million. Valcke's conduct and business ethics were severely
criticised by a New York judge who heard the case.
FIFA fired
Valcke and other marketing officials involved in the deal, then re-hired
him several months later as secretary general after Blatter was
re-elected president.
FIFA has been in crisis since the federal
investigations of bribery and corruption implicating senior soccer
officials were revealed in May.
Valcke was identified as having
processed transfers of $10 million from FIFA accounts which were alleged
by the U.S. Department of Justice to be bribes for CONCACAF officials
to support South Africa's successful bid to host the 2010 World Cup.
FIFA
and Valcke said the payments were authorised by then-finance committee
chairman Julio Grondona, after being requested by South African
officials to be paid from their tournament organisation funds.
Still, Blatter announced his planned resignation on June 2, the day after FIFA and Valcke's role in the affair was revealed.
Blatter
has said FIFA's troubles stem from the December 2010 decision to award
Russia and Qatar hosting rights to the 2018 and 2022 World Cups,
respectively. Valcke has been blamed for urging FIFA in 2008 to run a
dual bidding contest, in order to secure long-term commercial security
amid economic downturn.
However, the twin blockbuster contests
fueled allegations of deal-making and voting pacts, which are now being
investigated by Switzerland's attorney-general in a case likely to take
several years.
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