Michel Platini to resign as UEFA president after CAS imposes four-year ban - Los Angeles Times
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Michel Platini to resign as UEFA president after CAS imposes four-year ban

UEFA president Michel Platini attending the draw for the UEFA Europa League football group stage 2015-2016, in Monaco. He will resign his post, his Paris-based lawyers said.

UEFA president Michel Platini attending the draw for the UEFA Europa League football group stage 2015-2016, in Monaco. He will resign his post, his Paris-based lawyers said.

(Valery Hache / AFP/Getty Images)
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Michel Platini will resign as president of Europe’s governing body of soccer after failing to overturn his ban at the Court of Arbitration for Sport, which cut his sanction from six to four years.

Platini called the verdict a “deep injustice” and said he will now step down from the Union of European Football Associations position he has held since 2007.

CAS effectively removed Platini from world soccer by ensuring his ban “corresponds to the duration of a presidential term,” the court said in a statement.

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Platini’s current UEFA mandate expires in March 2019, and the next FIFA presidential election is due in May 2019.

“This decision is inflicting me a suspension whose length will de facto prevent me — as if by chance — from bidding for the next FIFA presidential election,” Platini said in a statement.

Leaving UEFA also frees him to pursue an appeal to Swiss courts and “establish my integrity in this case,” Platini said. Switzerland’s supreme court can overturn verdicts if legal process is abused but will not re-judge the evidence.

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The court ruled that Platini was guilty of conflict of interest for taking a $2 million payment from FIFA approved by Sepp Blatter in 2011. The money was uncontracted extra salary for working as Blatter’s presidential adviser from 1999-2002, and was largely unknown until it was revealed by Swiss federal prosecutors last September.

The CAS panel “was not convinced by the legitimacy of the 2,000,000 Swiss francs payment, which was only recognized by Mr. Platini and Mr. Blatter,” the CAS statement said.

Platini got the money “more than eight years after the end of his work relations, was not based on any document established at the time of the contractual relations and did not correlate with the alleged unpaid part of his salary,” the court said.

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In deciding the ban, the judges said Platini’s attitude in court was a factor in the verdict.

The ruling cited “the absence of any repentance and the impact that this matter has had on FIFA’s reputation.”

FIFA was also criticized by the court for knowing about the irregular payment for four years before the independent ethics committee opened an investigation. For that reason, CAS dismissed a FIFA ethics charge against Platini of disloyalty to FIFA.

The case ended Platini’s hopes of replacing Blatter at FIFA.

The UEFA executive committee will meet next week in Basel, Switzerland, on the sidelines of the Europa League final to discuss replacing Platini. An election is likely in mid-September at meetings of European soccer leaders in Athens, Greece.

Blatter is awaiting a CAS hearing to challenge his six-year ban.

Blatter and Platini were provisionally suspended by the FIFA ethics committee last October, then banned for eight years. FIFA’s appeal panel cut two years off their sanctions in February as reward for their long service to the sport.

The verdict came on Monday, one month before a project close to Platini’s heart — the European Championship in his native France — kicks off. He captained France to the title when it last hosted the tournament in 1984.

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Platini said as he left his hearing at CAS 10 days ago that he will attend matches as a guest at Euro 2016, played in nine cities from June 10-July 10. However, his ban bars him from formal business contact with soccer officials.

Platini put his faith in the independence of CAS throughout his case, and criticized the FIFA ethics court as biased. He often said there were forces inside soccer’s world body trying to block his presidential bid, though he did not identify who.

The CAS panel judged the evidence afresh and had the power to impose a life ban on Platini if it believed bribery and corruption were factors.

Platini received his money from FIFA in February 2011, when Blatter was preparing for what became a bitterly fought re-election contest against Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar. The Platini-led UEFA pledged support to Blatter before Bin Hammam’s candidacy was ended by allegations he bribed Caribbean voters.

The timing of the payment in an election year was noted in the CAS statement on Monday.

Platini and Blatter, the Frenchman’s former mentor, deny wrongdoing, and claim they had a verbal contract for the additional money.

“I had confidence in Mr. Blatter that he would pay me,” Platini said at CAS in Lausanne last month, when asked about the nine-year delay which breached Swiss law. “What is the problem?”

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Both men, whose friendship soured as Platini’s FIFA leadership ambitions grew, have effectively been a star witness in each other’s appeal case. They were heard on back-to-back days at the two earlier FIFA tribunals.

An entirely different CAS panel will judge Blatter’s appeal and should take into account the Platini verdict, said Matthieu Reeb, CAS’ secretary general, last month.

In February, Blatter was replaced as FIFA president by Gianni Infantino, Platini’s long-time right-hand man at UEFA.

UEFA publicly stood by Platini since details emerged last September, when Swiss federal prosecutors opened criminal proceedings against Blatter for suspected mismanagement. Both men were quizzed at FIFA headquarters after an executive committee meeting.

“Life has always given me beautiful surprises,” Platini said Monday. “Now I’m available to live them.”

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