Soccer

FIFA ethics court drops investigation of president Gianni Infantino

FIFA's ethics committee has cleared president Gianni Infantino of alleged misconduct relating to use of private flights to end weeks of speculation in Swiss and German media that he would become the latest world football leader suspended from office.

Probe finds no benefits deemed improper or violation committed

New FIFA President Gianni Infantino, seen here on March 31, was interviewed by investigators who never confirmed that a formal ethics case was open. (Fernando Vergara/Associated Press)

FIFA's ethics committee has cleared president Gianni Infantino of alleged misconduct relating to use of private flights to end weeks of speculation in Swiss and German media that he would become the latest world football leader suspended from office.

FIFA ethics prosecutors said Friday their decision to end a formal investigation into alleged conflicts of interest and improperly accepting gifts was supported by FIFA ethics judges.

"It was found that no violation of the FIFA Code of Ethics had been committed by Mr. Infantino," the ethics prosecuting chamber said in a statement published hours before Infantino is due to attend the opening ceremony at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

An internal FIFA memo leaked to media said Infantino took flights from the governments of World Cup hosts Russia and Qatar, along with former employer UEFA.

"[The] benefits enjoyed by Mr. Infantino were not considered improper in the light of applicable FIFA rules and regulations," the statement said.

Secret investigation

The weeks-long investigation also examined Infantino's hiring of senior advisers and refusal to sign his working contract since February. However, these issues were judged to be "internal compliance issues rather than an ethical matter."

The case against Infantino built after senior FIFA officials resigned or were fired since May, including audit panel chairman Domenico Scala and longtime FIFA finance director Markus Kattner.

Infantino was interviewed by investigators who worked in official secrecy and never confirmed that a formal case was open.

"The president would like to thank all those who co-operated with the Ethics Committee to ensure that the facts were heard and the truth prevailed," FIFA said in a statement.

The investigation revealed rifts at FIFA in the transition to Infantino's leadership since he was elected in February to modernize and clean up the scandal-hit organization after nearly 18 years of Sepp Blatter's presidency.

Blatter is serving a six-year ban for conflicts of interest over a $2 million US improper payment to Infantino's former boss, UEFA president Michel Platini, who was also banned from soccer. Platini's legal problems cleared the way for Infantino's unexpected candidacy.

Alleged expenses

Since May, a steady flow of leaked information, including recordings of FIFA council meetings and internal memos, was published in German-language media in Germany and Switzerland.

They included a recording of Infantino describing an "insulting" offer of less than $2 million in annual salary with none of the multi-million dollar World Cup bonuses enjoyed by Blatter.

The Swiss lawyer was also accused in the media of excessive spending on FIFA accounts for rental cars, a private driver, a tuxedo, flowers and a mattress for his FIFA-owned apartment in Zurich, and a step machine for his office at FIFA headquarters.

"Other allegations related to expenses and governance issues had also been investigated but did not lead to any prima facie cases," the ethics committee said Friday.

Amid so much media speculation, the ethics case continued in official secrecy and a formal investigation was never confirmed.

This was "to ensure independent, unimpaired and focused proceedings based on the considerable volume of documents," the prosecutors' statement said.