Ex-FIFA Vice-president Jack Warner ordered to repay $220,000
Jack Warner, a former FIFA vice-president banned for life by the governing body, was ordered to repay more than $220,000 to a businessman by the Trinidadian justice system on Monday.
“The Board… orders the defendants (Warner and two associates) to repay to the claimant the sum of TT$1,505,493 ($222,000) together with interest on that amount… from 2018 until repayment,” according to a decision of the Privy Council of Trinidad and Tobago.
In 2007, Trinidadian businessman Krishna Lalla loaned TT$1.5 million to Warner for his Joao Havelange Centre of Excellence, a football academy named in honour of the Brazilian former president of FIFA and located in Trinidad.
Warner promised to repay the amount using a TT$10 million subvention that he expected to receive from FIFA, according to Lalla’s testimony.
The property in question was inaugurated in 1999 and contains pitches, function rooms, a hotel, a conference centre, swimming pool and a gym.
Warner’s lawyers said that it was a gift intended to fund the electoral campaign of the United National Congress, a political party for whom Warner was an MP (2007-2015) and Minister of National Security (2010-2013).
Also Read: FIFA Suspends Congolese Coach 20 Years For Sexual Abuse
The Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF), formerly presided over by Warner, has sued the latter, claiming to be the rightful owner of the property.
Warner was banned for life from football by FIFA following the corruption scandal which embroiled the game’s world governing body in 2015.
Earlier that year, the Trinidadian was indicted on corruption charges by US authorities, who requested his extradition.
As a member of FIFA’s executive committee, Warner voted in favour of attributing the hosting rights of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.
FIFA led its investigation into the bidding processes for these two tournaments, before ruling in favour of banning Warner who quit the federation in 2011.