Former German FA boss Zwanziger files complaint against Swiss over 2006 World Cup
Record ID:
1427014
Former German FA boss Zwanziger files complaint against Swiss over 2006 World Cup
- Title: Former German FA boss Zwanziger files complaint against Swiss over 2006 World Cup
- Date: 13th August 2019
- Summary: FRANKFURT, GERMANY (FILE - MARCH 2, 2012) (REUTERS) ***WARNING: CONTAINS FLASH PHOTOGRAPHY*** VARIOUS OF WOLFGANG NIERSBACH AND ZWANZIGER HUGGING AFTER NIERSBACH WAS CHOSEN AS NEW DFB PRESIDENT FRANKFURT, GERMANY (FILE - NOVEMBER 9, 2015) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF NIERSBACH GIVING SPEECH RESIGNING AS DFB PRESIDENT NIERSBACH WALKING UP STAIRS
- Embargoed: 27th August 2019 13:39
- Keywords: German Football Association DFB president Theo Zwanziger Swiss federal prosecutors indictment charges
- Location: DIEZ & FRANKFURT, GERMANY / JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA / ZURICH, SWITZERLAND
- City: DIEZ & FRANKFURT, GERMANY / JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA / ZURICH, SWITZERLAND
- Country: Germany
- Topics: Soccer,Sport
- Reuters ID: LVA002AS1V51B
- Aspect Ratio: 16:9
- Story Text: EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THIS EDIT CONTAINS 4:3 MATERIAL
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: THE EDIT CONTAINS STILL IMAGES
Former German Football Association (DFB) president Theo Zwanziger said on Tuesday (August 13) that he has filed a criminal complaint against Swiss federal prosecutors who had filed fraud charges against him and two more former soccer officials a week ago.
Zwanziger, a lawyer by profession, told reporters in Diez (pron.: DEE-ts) the two investigators had "knowingly (made a) false interpretation of an evidence outcome," adding "the office of the Attorney General in Switzerland, together with FIFA, failed miserably."
On August 6, Swiss federal prosecutors said they had filed fraud charges against three former senior German soccer officials and one Swiss over a suspect payment linked to the 2006 World Cup hosted by Germany.
The indictment alleges Zwanziger and Wolfgang Niersbach, senior DFB official Horst Schmidt and former Swiss FIFA official Urs Linsi misled members of a DFB body about the true purpose of a payment of about 6.7 million euros ($7.5 million), a statement at the time said.
The four men have denied any wrongdoing.
In his remarks to reporters, Zwanziger accused former Asian Football Confederation president Mohammed Bin Hammam, a Qatari, of accepting the payment.
Bin Hammam has since been banned for life from football (soccer) by FIFA, which accused him of paying bribes, charges he denied.
"The investigations have revealed that in summer 2002 Franz Beckenbauer accepted a loan of 10 million Swiss francs in his own name and for his own account from Robert Louis-Dreyfus. This sum was used to fund various payments made via a Swiss law firm to a Qatari company belonging to Mohammed Bin Hammam," Switzerland's Attorney General's Office (OAG) said in its statement.
At the time, Bin Hammam was a member of the FIFA Executive Committee and the FIFA Finance Committee.
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