German
football legend Franz Beckenbauer is to face a criminal investigation
by Swiss prosecutors relating to Germany's successful bid to host the
2006 FIFA World Cup.
In a
statement released Thursday, the Office of the Attorney General of
Switzerland revealed it had opened proceedings relating to fraud,
criminal mismanagement, money laundering and misappropriation against
Beckenbauer, who was president of Germany's 2006 World Cup organizing
committee.
Three
former German Football Federation (DFB) officials are also being
investigated. Theo Zwanziger, Wolfgang Niersbach are former DFB
presidents and Horst Rudolf Schmidt is an ex-DFB secretary general.
The probe relates to accusations first made by German magazine
in October 2015 that a payment of €6.7 million ($7.2 million) had been
made to bribe officials of soccer's governing body FIFA in order to
secure votes for Germany's 2006 bid.
Germany narrowly pipped rival candidate South Africa to host the event by 12 votes to 11 in 2000.
Beckenbauer, who won the World Cup as both player and coach, any wrongdoing when the "Der Spiegel" allegations surfaced.
who was DFB president from 2012 until November 2015, when he resigned his post, also maintained he had acted properly.
"I
was always there from the first day of the 2006 World Cup bid right up
until the tournament's conclusion, and in all these years not only have I
always gone about my work with great passion, but I have also always
worked in good faith and in a proper manner,"
In July 2016, Niersbach was handed a one-year ban by FIFA's ethics committee who he had "failed to report findings about possible misconduct concerning the awarding of the 2006 FIFA World Cup."
The
OAG stated Thursday that it believes some of the alleged crimes took
place in Switzerland and its investigations are focusing on the joint
financing of a 6.7 million Euro ($7.46 million) gala event that was
being used as a cover for an illicit payment.
"It
is suspected that the suspects knew that this sum was not being used to
fund the gala event, but instead to repay a debt that was not owed by
the DFB," the attorney general's statement explained.
"In
particular, it is suspected that the suspects willfully misled their
fellow members of the executive board of the organizing committee for
the 2006 World Cup.
"This was
presumably done by the use of false pretenses or concealment of the
truth, thus inducing the other committee members to act in a manner that
caused DFB a financial loss."
Searches
were carried out in eight locations Thursday with the cooperation of
police in Germany and Austria, according to the OAG.
CNN contacted the agency that represents Beckenbauer by phone but did not receive a response by time of publication.
The
DFB's media director Ralf Köttker told CNN via email: "We've seen the
press releases of the Swiss General Prosecutor and the media coverage.
We have no further information regarding the matter."
Swiss
and federal prosecutors in the US are also currently investigating
successful bids by Russia and Qatar to host the 2018 and 2022 World
Cup's respectively.
Meanwhile, an independent report (in German)
earlier this year concluded that it could not prove or disprove that
votes were bought during the 2006 World Cup bidding process.
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