Salvadoran ex-FIFA official extradited to US

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NEW YORK, Jan 30, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Former El Salvador football federation
chief Reynaldo Vasquez was on Friday extradited to the United States, where
he faces bribery charges related to the massive FIFA corruption probe.

Vasquez, Salvador’s FESFUT football federation head between June 2009 and
July 2010, was indicted by the United States in December 2015 over multi-
million-dollar corruption at FIFA.

He was arraigned in a court in Brooklyn, New York on Friday afternoon on
charges that he took bribes in exchange for attributing broadcast rights to
matches organized by football’s world body.

Prosecutor Kristin Mace said Vasquez’s lawyer Gary Cutler had pleaded not
guilty on his client’s behalf.

Cutler said the defense would soon propose bail conditions so that Vasquez
could remain at liberty while awaiting trial, but Mace asked for him to be
held in custody, since he is facing serious charges that carry a potential
sentence of more than 20 years, and has ties to a foreign country.

Judge Pamela Chen agreed that Vasquez presented a flight risk and set his
next hearing for April 7.

FIFA banned Vasquez from all soccer-related activities for life and fined
him $522,000 in October 2019 for corrupt activities involving revenues from
friendly matches between 2009-2015. He was sentenced to eight years in jail
on charges of embezzlement by a Salvadoran court in March 2017.

The “Fifagate” bribery scandal led to the arrests of dozens of football
executives — many of them Latin American — and culminated in the downfall
of then FIFA boss Sepp Blatter.

Many of the 45 who were indicted pleaded guilty to avoid trial.

Some went before a jury, notably the former head of the Paraguayan
federation Juan Angel Napout who received a nine-year jail term, the toughest
sentence handed down in the case.