Michel Platini should be banned for life, FIFA ethics committee says
Maximum sanction could rule out run for FIFA presidency
The FIFA ethics committee has requested a life ban for Michel Platini, the Frenchman's lawyer said Tuesday, a move that would rule the UEFA president out of the race to succeed Sepp Blatter.
Thibaut d'Ales told The Associated Press that the maximum sanction was asked for when the FIFA ethics committee investigations unit submitted its final case report.
Blatter could also face expulsion from world soccer over a $2 million payment of FIFA money he approved to Platini in 2011.
Platini and Blatter face separate hearings before FIFA ethics judge Joachim Eckert in December.
"The overreaching of the request really convinces us of this commission's total lack of credibility," D'Ales said in a telephone interview. "There is not a single tangible element in this case that can confirm the suspicions."
Platini is currently serving a 90-day ban over cash he got as backdated salary almost nine years after he stopped working as Blatter's presidential adviser from 1998-2002.
Platini denies wrongdoing and says he had a verbal contract with Blatter to receive the money.
Blatter has argued that an oral agreement is valid under Swiss law. However, FIFA was also not legally required to pay Platini after five years passed.
December verdicts expected
Eckert is expected to give his verdicts in the cases of Platini and Blatter in December. Any sanctions can be challenged at the FIFA appeals committee and Court of Arbitration for Sport.
D'Ales said he was informed of the ethics committee's request on Monday and decided to make it public after it leaked in the French press. He said FIFA's aim is to prove that there was no contract between Platini and Blatter.
"Obviously we've got the proof that such a deal existed," D'Ales said. "We will submit it to CAS, which will handle the case within a fairly short space of time."
A spokesman for the FIFA ethics prosecutors declined to confirm what sanction was requested last week.
"We are entitled to comment but we decided for reasons of personality rights and the presumption of innocence not to publish the request," Andreas Bantel told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "If Mr. Platini wants to comment on the request he is entitled to do that."
Platini aims to clear his name and stand as a candidate in the FIFA presidential election on Feb. 26 to succeed Blatter, who is stepping down. Blatter announced his exit plans on June 2 under pressure from American and Swiss federal investigations into bribery and corruption at FIFA.
Switzerland's attorney-general has opened criminal proceedings against Blatter over the $2 million payment as suspected criminal mismanagement of FIFA money.
Platini was quizzed on Sept. 25 at FIFA headquarters as "between a witness and an accused person," according to attorney general Michael Lauber.
A FIFA life ban has been overturned by CAS in the past.
Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar had his expulsion by FIFA overturned on appeal in July 2012, more than one year after a bribery allegation ended his presidential campaign against Blatter. The CAS panel said a FIFA investigation did not prove Bin Hammam was the source of $40,000 bribes to Caribbean voters, though it suspected he was.
In a further FIFA legal development Tuesday, Switzerland's justice ministry said it agreed to a U.S. request to provide bank documents as evidence.
Details of the bank accounts involved were not given, though a U.S. Department of Justice indictment published in May identified accounts in Zurich used by marketing agents allegedly to steer bribes to soccer officials.