Football's international governing body and its president Sepp Blatter have tried to present a new face in recent years after so many allegations of vote-buying and top officials seeming entitled by seeking favours.
Though many rules and faces have changed at the game's headquarters, a skeptical view that the old culture remains in the inner circle has been fuelled by the arrest this week of a director from a longtime World Cup commercial partner.
The Copacabana Palace is also where police conducted parts of an undercover operation known as Jules Rimet, named after the former FIFA president who launched the World Cup in 1930.
Whelan, a brother-in-law of MATCH founders Jaime and Enrique Byrom, is suspected of providing tickets to a scalping ring dealing corporate hospitality packages at highly inflated prices. Reselling tickets for profit is illegal in Brazil. Rights to the USD 600 million market in World Cup corporate tickets are owned by the MATCH Hospitality subsidiary.
"MATCH have complete faith that the facts will establish that he (Whelan) has not violated any laws," the company said.
The scalping probe is an embarrassment for FIFA and provoked awkward questions after weeks in which predicted street protests in 12 host cities didn't materialize on mass scale.
FIFA has worked with the Byrom family from Mexico for more than 30 years and awarded contracts to the family's companies since the 1994 World Cup in the United States.
Asked if Whelan's accreditation would be revoked, FIFA spokeswoman Delia Fischer said football officials couldn't act before getting a full report from police.
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