FIFA filed court claims in Switzerland on Monday against Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini to recover more than $2 million from an irregular payment that led to both men being banned from international soccer.
FIFA said in a statement that any money recovered, plus interest, would be “fully channelled back into football development, which is where the money should have gone in the first place.”
As FIFA president in 2011, Blatter approved paying Platini’s request to receive uncontracted salary for advisory work done from 1998-2002. Elected president of European soccer body UEFA in 2007, Platini was widely expected to succeed Blatter at FIFA.
Platini’s FIFA campaign was effectively ended when details of the payment emerged in September 2015 in fallout from American and Swiss federal investigations of international soccer.
The former France great has consistently denied wrongdoing and said he paid taxes and social charges — potentially amounting to hundreds of thousands of Swiss francs — to Swiss authorities due on the FIFA payment.
Platini served a four-year ban confirmed by the Court of Arbitration for Sport. Blatter’s six-year ban expires in October 2021.
Any Platini comeback can be blocked by FIFA code of ethics rules, which require him to pay a fine of 60,000 Swiss francs ($61,000) imposed four years ago.
Platini has declined to pay while he is challenging his ban at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. Non-payment of any restitution ordered by a fresh Swiss court ruling could also delay his planned return to soccer.
“They (FIFA) will try to use what they want so that I don’t come back, I am sure,” Platini told The Associated Press in October.
Lawyers for Platini have also prepared a court filing in Switzerland against UEFA to receive up to one year's payments potentially due in his former employment contract, worth 3 million Swiss francs ($3.05 million) in annual salary and bonus.