Michel Platini, the former French great and current UEFA president, remains the favorite to succeed Sepp Blatter as FIFApresident despite being accused of accepting a $2 million “disloyal payment” from Blatter in 2011 for work deemed to have been done from January 1999 to June 2002, though key European backers have
Platini denies any wrongdoing, sayingthe nine-year delay between his work as a FIFA advisor and payment was because FIFA’s financial situation meant he could not be paid in full when he was still working. (It’s been noted, though, thatFIFA reported a surplus of about $82 million for the period 1999-2002.) UEFA said Platini is simply a witness in the criminal investigation of Blatter, but Swiss Attorney General
Until now, Platini has largely been immune from the scandals that have rockedFIFA and the international game. He has admitted switching his vote from the USA to Qatar for the 2022World Cup host country in 2010 after a meeting, hosted by then-France President Nicolas Sarkozy at his official residence in Paris and also attended bysenior Qatari officials. He denied being bought by the Qataris after his son,
Until now, Platini is unique among the six confederation presidents who were in power in the leadup to the 2018 and 2022 World Cup votes in December 2010 not to have been indicted, banned orreprimanded in the wake of corruption scandals — and it’s been so bad that two of their successors have been indicted.
The first to fall three weeks before the 2018 and 2022 votes weretaken in Zurich was Tahitian Reynald Temarii. The president of Oceania’s confederation was suspended for one year for breaching FIFA’s loyalty andconfidentiality rules when he was secretly filmed in a sting by undercover reporters from the Sunday Times who posed as American lobbyists trying to buy votes for the 2022 World Cup bid. Temarii askedfor $2.3 million to fund a soccer academy in New Zealand. In 2015, he was banned from soccerfor eight years for taking $300,000 for Qatari Mohamed bin Hammam, the former president of the Asian confederation,to pay legal costs in the Sunday Times case.
In June 2011, Jack Warner, a member of the FIFA executive committee since 1983 and Concacafpresident since 1990, quit after FIFA’s ethics committee began proceedings against him on at least three separate corruption and bribery charges. The charges related to a meeting of Caribbean FootballUnion members he organized in Trinidad for them to meet bin Hammam, who was running for FIFA president against Sepp Blatter. It was revealed brown envelopes containing $40,000 were offered to the CFUmembers. On May 27, Warner was one of 14 individuals indicted in a Federal probe into soccer corruption but is fighting extradition to the United States. On Tuesday, FIFA finally got around to banningWarner — also linked to Blatter in the Swiss criminal investigation — for life from all soccer activities.
Bin Hammam’s presidential ambitions were derailed when he was banned for lifefrom all soccer activities by the FIFA ethics committee that investigated the CFU scandal. The Court of Arbitration for Sport overturned the ban in 2012, but Bin Hammam was provisionally suspendedover allegations of financial mismanagement while serving AFC president, basically co-mingling AFC and personal business accounts to dole out tens of thousands of dollars to curry support in Africaand Asia for Qatar’s World Cup bid and his FIFA presidential ambitions. Bin Hammam later quit all soccer activities and was banned for life by FIFA.
In April 2013,Nicolas Leoz quit, saying heart problems made it impossible for him to travel and fulfill his FIFA duties and those as president of Conmebol, a post he has held since 1986. Leoz,who is now 87 and resides in his native Paraguay, was also indicted by Federal authorities in May and is accused of being one of the ringleaders in a bribery scheme involving Traffic and other SouthAmerican sports agencies and going back more than two decades. He, too, is fighting extradition.
The successors to both Warner and Leoz, JeffreyWebb at Concacaf and Eugenio Figueredo at Conmebol, were also both indicted and arrested in Zurich. Webb, accused of widespread bribery after takingreplacing Warner, is under house arrest at his home outside Atlanta, while Figueredo, liked in the Traffic bribery schemes and also accused of faking dementia so he won’t have to take U.S. citizentests, remains in jail in Zurich, though Swiss authorities have agreed to turn him over to the United States.
That leaves Platini and African confederation president
Hayatou, CAFpresident since 1988, was also linked to charges of bribery related to the award of the 2022 World Cup to Qatar. Former Qatari bid committee staffer Phaedra Almajidsaid she attended a meeting in 2010 at which Hayatou and two other FIFA executive committee members Jacques Anouma and Amos Adamu (later suspended in the wake of the Sunday Times sting) were offered $1.5 million to vote for Qatar. She later retracted the claims, saying she had fabricated them in order toget revenge on her Qatari bosses after losing her job, but she has since said she was
Blatter has tried to shift blame for soccer’swidespread corruption problems on FIFA’s six confederations. To an extent, Blatter has a point. The widespread corruption among soccer’s confederations presidents is no coincidence. The power theyhold sitting on FIFA’s executive committee and controlling votes — Hayatou’s African confederation was able to keep Blatter in power in the most recent election because its 54 members voted as a bloc– has made them prime targets in bribery schemes related to marketing rights, World Cup hosting bids and FIFA elections.
It should be added that they have been all too willingparticipants abusing their positions to amass enormous wealth.

Platini’s time is coming, but when will Chuck Blazer’s American cohorts from theUSSF get the knock on their door..Remember I said when …not if
I’m still hoping it’s the USSF that is Feeding all this info to the Feds…Hoping!!!!
Platini is not suitable to be the head of FIFA because he promised the heads of Qatar to change to a winter tournament before the bidding process of a summer tournament.