Miguel Trujillo, a 65-year-old Colombian resident in the US, pleaded guilty in a New York federal court to four counts of money laundering, wire fraud and a falsified tax return.
He also dropped detailed bombshells against the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF), that -- while not naming names -- could challenge the not-guilty pleas entered by CONCACAF current and former officials and others indicted.
Many have been hauled before US courts but only a handful have entered guilty pleas. Some of those indicted are on bail or under house arrest pending trial, while others have yet to be arrested or extradited.
Trujillo, a football consultant and FIFA-licensed match agent, worked with Media World and Traffic Sports USA, two events management companies implicated in securing lucrative broadcast and marketing contracts through bribes to FIFA officials.
Trujillo said that, between 2008 and 2015, bribes were paid to officials in three federations belonging to the Central American Football Union (UNCAF) to obtain marketing rights for qualifying games for the World Cups in Brazil in 2014, Russia in 2018 and Qatar in 2022.
He said Media World then sold on the rights to Traffic Sports USA, an example of how the far-reaching graft dragged in businesses and shadowy figures across international boundaries.
Trujillo described how the bribe money transited through accounts in Panama and Miami.
He also spoke of "tens of thousands of dollars in bribes to high-ranking officials of various soccer federations, including officials of two different UNCAF federations."
The Colombian also said that he had been a go-between for Argentine sports marketing companies and CONCACAF, and helped bribe officials in that latter organisation to win rights for events such as the CONCACAF Gold Cup.
Again without identifying individuals, Trujillo recounted trips to Argentina and Uruguay, and meetings between the companies and CONCACAF officials in which bribes also amounting to "hundreds of thousands of dollars" were paid.
"The Argentines did in fact pay these bribes to the officials by wiring funds from a bank account they controlled in Switzerland to the Panamanian bank account of a company I controlled," he said in his stinging testimony.
One of the businessmen, Alejandro Burzaco, in November pleaded guilty and had $21 million seized.
The two others, brothers Hugo and Mariano Jinkis, are under house arrest in Argentina.
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