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  • Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

    Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion from world football governing body Fifa as he is caught up in another World Cup ticket scandal.

    Britain’s Daily Mail reported on Tuesday that Warner was involved in the sale of thousands of World Cup tickets on the black market, including to 900 England fans.

    A report by journalist Andrew Jennings said the paper had obtained confidential reports, produced by auditors Ernst & Young for Fifa, that Warner made at least 500,000 British pounds (US$933,000) trading in World Cup tickets.

    Another report on ESPNsoccernet yesterday quoted the accountants saying: “We can confirm that tickets included in orders under customer reference 201498572 (Mr Jack Warner) were transferred or resold into the secondary market in breach of the 2006 Fifa World Cup Germany ticketing general terms and conditions.”

    According to the report, which has been published on www.transparencyinsport.org, the auditors were called in when Antonio Gallicchio, head of a Swiss travel firm, complained to Fifa that he had not received a number of World Cup tickets, with a cover price of 100 euros, for which he was paying 400 euros each.

    It alleged that Warner had bought the tickets from a Florida-based agency called Kick Sports but Ernst & Young reported tracing the source of the tickets to Warner.

    They allegedly established that “Warner had bought 180 tickets on his credit card at face value of 100 euros each, they were picked up from Fifa’s ticket office by his son Daryan, and were then bought from Kick Sports by Gallicchio for 400 euros apiece—54,000 euros (£37,000) more than face value,” a report on the Web site sportinglife.com reported.

    Warner could not be contacted yesterday for comment.

    It is not the first time Warner has been under World Cup ticket scrutiny.

    In February, he was cited by Fifa for an ethics violation over World Cup ticket sales.

    The only company selling tickets in T&T, Simpaul, was a travel agency owned by Warner’s family.

    In March, Warner’s fellow executive committee members allowed him a reprieve despite ruling he was guilty of a clear conflict of interest.

    Fifa spokesman Andreas Herren said the executive committee will discuss this latest matter on Friday in Zurich at Warner’s request, the Daily Mail said.

    “In this case, such matters request very careful assessment in order to avoid prejudgement,” Herren told The Associated Press.

  • #2
    RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

    <TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD><DIV class=bigheadline>Jack Warner faces fresh FIFA enquiry
    </DIV><DIV class=byline>Lasana Liburd</DIV>
    <DIV class=dateline>Wednesday, September 13th 2006</DIV>
    </TD></TR><TR><TD></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE cellSpacing=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD width=5></TD><TD><DIV class=texte>

    FIFA vice-president Jack Warner faces a fresh enquiry by football's world governing body after being again fingered in a World Cup tickets scandal.

    English investigative journalist Andrew Jennings, whose latest book "Foul" catalogues alleged widespread corruption in FIFA, claimed to have unearthed new damning information regarding Warner's conduct based on leaked documents from FIFA's Zurich headquarters.

    Jennings' article, which broke exclusively in yesterday's Daily Mail newspaper in Britain, said Warner and his son, Daryan, made a minimum of $5 million from the resale of Germany World Cup tickets in violation of several FIFA rules.

    Warner's mobile phone was switched off yesterday and, up to press time, he had not responded to a voice message left by the Express that asked for his explanation of the new twist to the ticketing scandal.

    If true, Warner would be the second executive committee member to have breached FIFA's rules at the 2006 World Cup. Botswana administrator Ismail Bhamjee was sent home from Germany by FIFA president Sepp Blatter after he admitted to selling tickets above face value and resigned his post on the executive committee and quit all his sporting posts with immediate effect. </DIV><DIV class=texte>

    "This is a fact that really makes me furious," said Blatter about Bhamjee's act. "This man must leave the competition immediately... It is so disappointing."

    Bhamjee sold 12 tickets at three times their face value for the World Cup fixture between England and Trinidad and Tobago.

    Warner is alleged to have sold at least 5,400 tickets at as much as four times their value for matches involving England, Mexico and Japan to companies in the United States, Switzerland and Japan.

    Yet, the Mail claimed that FIFA protected Warner after receiving an allegedly damning report from international accounting firm, Ernst &amp; Young.

    FIFA media chief Andreas Herren did not deny or confirm the allegations but replied that "the matter will be discussed at the next meeting of the FIFA Executive, coming September 15 (Friday), at the request of Jack Warner".

    FIFA's authorised independent audit of World Cup ticket sales by Ernst &amp; Young began in January after the Express exclusively revealed that Warner diverted Trinidad and Tobago's ticket allocation into his family-owned business, Simpaul Travel Service.

    In February, FIFA's Committee for Ethics and Fair Play ruled that Warner violated three sections of its Code of Ethics by committing what they referred to as "a conflict of interest". But the FIFA executive committee, headed by Blatter, pardoned Warner on the grounds that he supposedly sold his stake in Simpaul Travel and the company no longer sold tickets as part of a package deal involving accommodation.

    Warner is an open political ally of Blatter and has publicly reiterated that the 35 CONCACAF nations would support the Swiss administrator at FIFA elections.

    Simpaul Travel is now officially owned by Margaret Fletcher and Princes Rose Campbell, who share the same Barataria address and gave their occupations as housewife and veterinarian, respectively.

    Fletcher and Campbell have consistently refused comment on the million-dollar company, while there was no proof of a transfer of shares.

    The Express confirmed, though, that Simpaul Travel continued to sell World Cup tickets as part of a package deal, while the Mail alleged that Daryan Warner still acted as the compa

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    • #3
      RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

      Looks like trouble nuh stop follow Jack. Watch him ride out this one now.
      "Only when you drink from the river of silence shall you indeed sing. And when you have reached the mountain top, then you shall begin to climb. And when the earth shall claim your limbs, then shall you truly dance." ~ Kahlil Gibran

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      • #4
        RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

        Triniman, how unnuh ago reach South Africa 2010 if Jack Warner get expelled? Dog nyam unnuh suppa.

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        • #5
          RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

          I hate to have to say this naminirt but this will be the end of Jack Warner's role as Vice President with Fifa. Sepp Blatter is going to run again and he is going to wash his hands of Jack before the next election. Your boy's days are numbered. This is a big big scandal. Can't say that I am too sorry as he has a habit of rigging the qualifying groups to give T&amp;T the easy route while screwing over Jamaica in the process. Time for him to go. - T.K.
          No need to thank me forumites.

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          • #6
            RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

            Respectfully disagree Tilla. This is a big scandal that will take him down. He is finished. - T.K.
            No need to thank me forumites.

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            • #7
              RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

              <DIV>But TK, it's for that very reason why Sepp will not abandon him. If Sepp is seeking re-election, then he's is going to want to count on the 30-odd votes that Jack and CONCACAF can deliver for him.</DIV><DIV></DIV><DIV>Unfortunately, the devil will go shopping for a sweater before Jack is kicked out because of this latest scandal. But, if the impossible does happen, what will happen to all those people who fell loyally (and blindly) behind the region's football god? Karl, what would you do then? </DIV>


              BLACK LIVES MATTER

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              • #8
                RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

                Mosiah (9/13/2006)<DIV>But TK, it's for that very reason why Sepp will not abandon him. If Sepp is seeking re-election, then he's is going to want to count on the 30-odd votes that Jack and CONCACAF can deliver for him.</DIV><DIV></DIV><DIV>Unfortunately, the devil will go shopping for a sweater before Jack is kicked out because of this latest scandal. But, if the impossible does happen, what will happen to all those people who fell loyally (and blindly) behind the region's football god? Karl, what would you do then? </DIV>
                Seek another who will champion our cause! Burrell...perhaps?
                "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

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                • #9
                  RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

                  mosiah i agree.....remember fifa is outside of the legal channels .... if sepp decides to run, jack stays and if there is a challenger jack can play both ends against the middle...even if sepp steps down the next person who would be king would look to jack for help....jack was shrewd in creating so many fifa affiliates in this region.

                  Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

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                  • #10
                    RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

                    Is Jack Warner the Don King of football?
                    Solidarity is not a matter of well wishing, but is sharing the very same fate whether in victory or in death.
                    Che Guevara.

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                    • #11
                      RE: Jack Warner faces a fight to avoid expulsion

                      still hook on trinidad getting easy rout and screwing up JA what a pity with you

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