José Hawilla |
To help bring corruption
charges against some of the most powerful men in world soccer, prosecutors in
the United States convinced a Brazilian sports mogul to confess to a life at
the nexus of money, soccer and graft.
José
Hawilla, 71, the founder of sports marketing company Traffic, has spent decades
connecting soccer officials with surging revenues from broadcast and
advertising rights, while dodging investigations from Brazilian lawmakers and
prosecutors.
Through
connections at the top of the Brazilian game, Hawilla has negotiated TV deals
for South America's biggest tournaments since 1991, along with nearly half a
billion dollars of sponsorships including Nike Inc and the Coca-Cola Co .
His
hefty commissions were divvied up as kickbacks for soccer officials in Brazil
and throughout the Americas, Hawilla told U.S. investigators as part of plea
deal in which he also agreed to forfeit over US$151 million.
Reuters report:
In
an indictment released by the Department of Justice on Wednesday, Hawilla was
one of four convicted defendants who helped U.S. investigators build their case
against 14 top global soccer officials and sports marketing executives accused
of orchestrating more than US$150 million in bribes and kickbacks.
Hawilla's
lawyer told newspaper Folha de S. Paulo that he had pled guilty, remained free
in the United States, and was cooperating with investigators there. It was
unclear exactly what information he had passed to U.S. officials.
Hawilla's
guilty plea and the U.S. graft charges against José Maria Marin, former head of
Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF), stirred hopes in Brazil that the
biggest names in the sport were finally within the law's reach. Anger has been
building for years in Brazil over corruption scandals that are battering its
economy and souring its politics.
"For
a long time, Hawilla was as big as it got in the business, and his influence is
still huge," said Pedro Daniel, an advisor to Bom Senso FC, a group of
Brazilian soccer players trying to reform the sport.
"This
is just the tip of the iceberg."
House Of Cards
A
TV presenter in the 1970s, Hawilla used his close relationship with Ricardo
Teixeira, who ran the CBF for 23 years before Marin's two-year term, to buy a
small-time billboard company in 1980 and build it into one of the world's five
biggest sports marketing agencies.
Traffic
outgrew Brazil, moving into the negotiation of marketing rights for world
soccer governing body FIFA, and expanding into the United States. Traffic
Group's U.S. president, Aaron Davidson, was among those indicted on Wednesday.
In
Brazil, Hawilla even managed in the soccer business what few could do on the
field: taking legend Pelé out of the game.
When
the three-time World Cup winner's marketing agency missed a shot at a contract
for a Brazilian soccer tournament in the early 1990s, he told Playboy magazine
in an interview that he had lost to Traffic because of corruption.
Teixeira
sued Pelé, who was marginalized from CBF business and the ceremonies
surrounding the 1994 World Cup, the fourth won by Brazil.
"Pelé
was a persona non grata with the national team because of Hawilla's scheme.
That shows you who was running the CBF's business under Ricardo Teixeira,"
said Leandro Cipoloni, an investigative journalist and co-author of The Dirty
Side of Soccer, a book on the corruption scandals sullying the Brazilian game.
"Now the house of cards is coming down," he said.
Teixeira
and Hawilla could not be reached for comment. A spokesman for Pelé did not
reply to a request for comment.
Teixeira
left the CBF in 2012 amid criticism over his preparations for the 2014 World
Cup, which Brazil hosted, and a police investigation into reports that he had
taken million of dollars in bribes from a sports marketing firm. Teixeira
denied the allegations and was not charged for any wrongdoing.
In
1996, Traffic negotiated a $369 million deal between Nike and the Brazilian
national team, at the time one of the biggest sponsorships ever, which helped
the U.S. company break the grip of rival Adidas AG on the global soccer
industry.
A
Senate commission investigation in 2000 found that Traffic got a 5 percent
commission on the Nike deal, making millions for an intermediary role that
senators leading the probe called unnecessary.
Hawilla
paid half of the money he made on a 1996 sportswear sponsorship to an unnamed
"high-ranking CBF official," according to the charges that U.S.
prosecutors made public on Wednesday, based on testimony from Hawilla's plea
bargain.
The
indictment did not name Nike but the details matched the 1996 deal. Nike said
on Wednesday said that it was cooperating with authorities on the allegations.
Traffic
also played an intermediary role on Coca-Cola's US$8 million CBF sponsorship in
1994, pocketing 20 percent of the contract, according to the Senate
investigation in Brazil.
The
commission's findings did not lead to charges over the alleged graft.
Coca-Cola
called on FIFA on Wednesday to increase transparency and resolve the
controversy.
Broadcast
and marketing rights for international competitions were even more lucrative
than Brazilian events, leaving room for hefty bribes, according to U.S.
prosecutors.
They
say Traffic and its partners paid US$100 million in bribes to South American
soccer officials for a 2013 contract securing rights to the Copa America
international competition in 2015, 2016, 2019 and 2023.
Hawilla,
who has spent less time on the daily business at Traffic and more time in the
United States in recent years, has avoided serious legal troubles in Brazil.
Prosecutors in Sao Paulo,
where Traffic has an office, said their records on the company are
confidential.
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