FIFA ends bribery case against German great Franz Beckenbauer

It was the FIFA ethics investigation many hoped would remove Russia and Qatar as World Cup hosts. Two years later, it is still not close to being published (Markus Schreiber/AP)

GENEVA -- FIFA's ethics judges closed a bribery investigation against German great Franz Beckenbauer because a statute of limitations expired, soccer's world governing body said Thursday.

Beckenbauer and other German officials who helped organize the 2006 World Cup had been subject to a FIFA ethics investigation opened in 2016. There was no time limitation on bribery prosecutions in FIFA's ethics code until it amended the rules in 2018 to add a 10-year limit.

Cases against Theo Zwanziger, who once replaced Beckenbauer on the FIFA executive committee member, and Horst Schmidt were also closed, FIFA said Thursday.

The case invovled a complex trail of suspect payments between the German World Cup organizers, FIFA and Qatari soccer official Mohamed bin Hammam ahead of the 2006 tournament.

"Mr. Beckenbauer's actions were related and limited to the bribe payment of (10 million Swiss francs) to Mr. Bin Hammam, which occurred in 2002," FIFA ethics judges said.

Federal prosecutors in Switzerland had also investigated the case but their criminal trial collapsed in April last year, also because a statute of limitations was set to expire.

Beckenbauer was not a defendant in that trial, citing health reasons, though he was set to give evidence as a witness.

A dispute between FIFA and Beckenbauer about his state of health was revealed in the ruling published Thursday to explain why the ethics case was closed.

Beckenbauer's lawyers said he could not be interrogated because he was "suffering from a progressive neurodegenerative disease (and) there is no expectation of a notable improvement."

Those details were provided in a March 2020 medical certificate also given to Swiss prosecutors ahead of the trial.

"Mr. Beckenbauer is not in a position to participate in lengthy oral questioning or proceedings," his lawyers told FIFA.

However, FIFA judges noted that Beckenbauer had attended public events and given interviews last year, including events to celebrate 30 years since he coached West Germany to win the 1990 World Cup.

"His medical condition did not prevent him from attending events, travelling to foreign countries (despite the COVID pandemic), posing for pictures, making speeches, and giving at least three interviews," FIFA judges said in their ruling.

"In particular, he did not appear to have any memory problems remembering matches of the 1990 FIFA World Cup, an event occurring 30 years ago, in vivid detail," the ruling said.

The judges also said "Beckenbauer invoked his right to silence and refused to provide the investigatory chamber with any written or oral statement" requested between 2015 and 2018.

Beckenbauer also refused to attend three interviews with FIFA investigators citing that he had undergone "open heart surgery and was suffering from several medical conditions."

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