FIFA Corruption Scandal: Ecuador Football Federation Chief Turns Himself in
Ecuadorian Football Federation chief, Luis Chiriboga was among those named on Thursday in the latest US indictment stemming from a sweeping investigation of corruption at FIFA.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: December 05, 2015 02:18 pm IST
The head of Ecuador's football federation, one of 16 officials newly charged with corruption by US authorities, turned himself in on Friday in his home country, which does not extradite its nationals. (South American Football Bosses Charged in Latest FIFA Graft Probe)
Luis Chiriboga, who is also a member of the executive committee of South American confederation CONMEBOL, was among those named on Thursday in the latest US indictment stemming from a sweeping investigation of corruption at FIFA. (FIFA Corruption Scandal: Ecuador's Football Chief Refuses to Resign)
"I have come voluntarily to cooperate with the prosecution," Chiriboga, 69, told journalists as he surrendered to local authorities.
Prosecutors said a judge had issued a warrant for his arrest and frozen his bank accounts after Ecuadoran investigators opened their own probe in connection with the US charges.
Two of the other 16 officials indicted on Thursday, all Latin Americans, were arrested in a dawn raid on a Zurich hotel reminiscent of the day the scandal at world football's governing body first exploded in May.
They are Juan Angel Napout of Paraguay and Alfredo Hawit of Honduras, both FIFA vice presidents.
Chiriboga's lawyer said her client may be jailed for up to 90 days during the initial investigation.