FIFA Ex-Vice President Eugenio Figueredo Jailed Pending Trial in Uruguay
Ex-FIFA vice-president Eugenio Figueredo, who was also the former president of the South American confederation CONMEBOL, has been jailed pending trial in the corruption scandal.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: December 25, 2015 11:28 am IST
Ex-FIFA vice president Eugenio Figueredo was jailed pending trial in his native Uruguay Thursday after being extradited from Switzerland to answer charges in the massive corruption scandal roiling international football. (FIFA Corruption Scandal: Tainted CONCACAF to be Run by Executive Committee)
Figueredo, the former president of South American confederation CONMEBOL, arrived Thursday morning and was taken directly to an initial court appearance, where he was remanded in custody, court sources told AFP. (FIFA Suspends Napout and Hawit for 90 Days)
But Judge Adriana de los Santos may still grant him house arrest, as his lawyer has requested, the sources said. (FIFA Vice-Presidents from Paraguay, Honduras Arrested)
Figueredo faces two to 15 years in prison if convicted. (South American Football Bosses Charged in Latest FIFA Graft Probe)
The 83-year-old ex-football boss was one of seven top FIFA officials arrested at a Zurich luxury hotel in May, a raid that kicked off an unprecedented crisis at world football's governing body.
The United States, which led the investigation, is also seeking to extradite Figueredo on charges of soliciting multi-million-dollar bribes from sports marketing firms.
Figueredo had agreed to be sent to Uruguay but is fighting extradition to the United States. The Swiss justice ministry (FOJ) had approved his extradition to both countries, and said in November it would be up to the United States to decide whether to let Uruguay have priority.
"If the US authorities do not agree, the issue will be decided by the FOJ," it said at the time.
Figueredo's lawyer has said her client is in poor health and should be granted house arrest because of his age. Figueredo was head of the Uruguayan Football Association from 1997 to 2006 and became CONMEBOL president in 2013.
CONMEBOL's last three presidents have all been arrested in the scandal, plunging the South American confederation into crisis. At FIFA, the spiralling scandal took a dramatic new turn last week when the organization banned disgraced president Sepp Blatter from football for eight years over ethics violations.