FIFA ethics panel meets to discuss Sepp Blatter, Platini
By ROB HARRIS and SAMUEL PETREQUIN, Associated Press
Oct 7, 2015 12:06 PM CDT
FILE - In this Nov. 8, 2004 file photo Sepp Blatter, President of the FIFA, left, shakes hands with the President of the Venezuelan Soccer Federation, Rafael Esquivel, in Caracas, Venezuela. A senior South American soccer official has been denied bail on health grounds in Switzerland as he fights extradition...   (Associated Press)

LONDON (AP) — The FIFA ethics committee has been examining the cases of President Sepp Blatter and UEFA President Michel Platini, a move that could lead to the suspension of world soccer's most powerful officials.

Abdoulaye Makhtar Diop, a Senegalese member of the executive committee's adjudicatory chamber, said in statement Wednesday that the Blatter and Platini cases were being discussed at meetings in Zurich this week.

Ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckert will take the final decision on the fates of Blatter and Platini, who were questioned as part of a Swiss criminal investigation last week. Blatter is a suspect but Platini was questioned as between witness and accused person over a payment he received from FIFA in 2011.

Blatter has not yet received any news of the ethics committee's decision, long-time aide Walter Gagg told The Associated Press.

"I was with Mr. Blatter 10 minutes ago and we know nothing about (a decision)," Gagg said. "He left now. He had no news."

The statement from Diop also said the committee was evaluating the case of former FIFA vice president Chung Mong-joon. The South Korean has already confirmed he was being investigated for breaches relating to South Korea's failed bid for the 2022 World Cup and for openly criticizing the investigation.

Ethics committee spokesman Marc Tenbuecken declined to comment on the cases, despite Diop's statement.

"We are strictly limited in our possibilities to communicate ongoing procedures," Tenbuecken said.

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Petrequin reported from Paris.