Published: 16:17, May 2, 2020 | Updated: 03:21, June 6, 2023
Banks admit laundering in FIFA probe
By AP via Xinhua

Israelis wearing masks and gloves against the coronavirus COVID 19 next to an automated teller machine of Bank Hapoalim in Jerusalem on May 1, 2020. (MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP)

NEW YORK-An Israeli bank and its Swiss subsidiary agreed to pay over US$30 million for their role in conspiring to launder more than US$20 million in kickbacks to soccer officials, becoming the first financial institutions implicated in the FIFA scandal to reach a resolution with US prosecutors.

The scheme took place through the banks' Miami branch from 2010-15, with many of the payments tied to marketing rights for the Copa America tournament

Bank Hapoalim BM in Israel and its wholly owned Swiss company Hapoalim Ltd. agreed to forfeit US$20.73 million and pay a fine of US$9.33 million as part of a non-prosecution agreement, the US attorney's office in Brooklyn said on Thursday. The scheme took place through the banks' Miami branch from 2010-15, with many of the payments tied to marketing rights for the Copa America tournament.

Eugenio Figueredo, a former president of South American governing body CONMEBOL and Uruguay's federation, was among those accused of receiving the bribes, along with Luis Bedoya, a former president of Colombia's federation and, like Figueredo, a onetime member of FIFA's executive committee.

Former federation presidents Sergio Jadue of Chile and Rafael Esquivel of Venezuela also were implicated by the US Justice Department, along with Jose Luis Chiriboga, whose father, Luis, was president of Ecuador's federation.

Bank Hapoalim (BHMB) and Hapoalim Ltd. (BHS) reached a deal with the Justice Department and the US attorney's office in which they and BHMB subsidiary Hapoalim (Latin America) SA will not be subject to prosecution for any of the crimes admitted in the deal, except for criminal tax violations. No bank employees involved in the illegal activities were identified by name.

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"This announcement illustrates another aspect in the spider web of bribery, corruption and backroom deals going on behind the scenes as soccer games were played on the field," William F. Sweeney, assistant director in charge of the FBI's New York field office, said in a statement. "Bank Hapoalim admits executives looked the other way, and allowed illicit activity to continue even when employees discovered the scheme and reported it."

In a weave of bribes that included details from wiretaps and unidentified individuals referred to as Relationship Manager 1, Compliance Employees 1 and 2 and Co-Conspirators 1 and 2, prosecutors detailed the actions by Full Play Group, the Argentine company that won rights to sell media and marketing for the 2015, 2016, 2019 and 2023 Copa Americas, South America's national team championship.

Traffic Sports, a Brazilian company, held the rights from 1987-2011. Traffic Sports and Traffic Sports USA reached guilty pleas and were fined a total of US$1 million last year.

Full Play is controlled by Hugo Jinkis and son Mariano, who were first indicted in 2015 and have been charged with racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud, wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy.

Full Play had accounts at the banks in the names of subsidiaries Bayan Group, Cross Trading and Yorkfields, and the two Jinkises used those accounts to make at least 53 bribe payments totaling more than US$14.02 million from 2010-14 to Bedoya, Chiriboga, Esquivel and Figueredo as part of Full Play's deal to acquire marketing rights to the 2015, 2016, 2019 and 2023 Copa Americas, prosecutors said in a statement of facts.

"For nearly five years, Bank Hapoalim employees used the US financial system to launder tens of millions of dollars in bribe payments to corrupt soccer officials in multiple countries," Brian A. Benczkowski, assistant attorney general of the criminal division, said in a statement.

"Today's announcement demonstrates the department's commitment to holding financial institutions to account when they knowingly facilitate corruption and other criminal conduct."

Federal authorities said on Thursday that Bank Hapoalim and its Swiss subsidiary also agreed to pay US$874 million to resolve allegations they conspired with US taxpayers to hide more than US$7.6 billion from the IRS through deposits in more than 5,500 secret Swiss and Israeli bank accounts.

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Since the first arrests of people attending the FIFA Congress in May 2015, there have been 26 publicly announced individual guilty pleas, many from former soccer officials, including CONCACAF general secretary Chuck Blazer.

Former Brazilian federation president Jose Maria Marin and former CONMEBOL president Juan Angel Napout of Paraguay were convicted at trial and sentenced to prison, and there were four corporate guilty pleas and one corporate deferred prosecution agreement. This was the second corporate non-prosecution agreement following a deal by Imagina Media.