Former FIFA vice-president Jack Warner has been banned for
life from all football-related activity, the adjudicatory chamber of the Ethics
Committee of the sport’s world governing body said on Tuesday.
The former Caribbean federation president “was found to have
committed many and various acts of misconduct continuously and repeatedly
during his time as an official in different high-ranking and influential
positions at FIFA and CONCACAF” said the Ethics Committee statement.
The 72-year-old’s ban covers all football activity at both a
national and international level and is effective from September 25.
“In his positions as a football official, he was a key
player in schemes involving the offer, acceptance, and receipt of undisclosed
and illegal payments, as well as other money-making schemes,” added the statement.
Warner is also fighting extradition from his homeland in
Trinidad and Tobago to the United States to face 12 charges of wire fraud,
racketeering and money laundering related to the ongoing FIFA corruption
scandal.
He faces a hearing in his homeland in December.
US authorities, who have charged 14 FIFA officials and
sports marketing executives of soliciting and receiving more than $150 million
(134 million euros) in bribes and kickbacks over two decades, applied in July
for Warner’s extradition.
Warner has previously been a member of parliament as well as
FIFA vice-president and president of both the North and Central American
Federation (CONCACAF) and the Caribbean Football Union.
He is accused, amongst other things, of buying the
television rights to the 2010 and 2014 World Cup tournaments from FIFA
president Sepp Blatter for grossly deflated sums.
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