La mafia du foot argentin
Romain MolinaenglishfrpublicupdatedRead in about 4 minutes instead of watching 24 minutes.
Abuse Allegations And FIFA Response
- The video opens by accusing FIFA of protecting Argentina’s football federation despite scandals involving alleged crimes and misconduct.
- The narrator details allegations against youth women’s coach Diego Guacci, including psychological harassment, sexualized remarks toward minors, and requests for intimate photos.
- Five players reportedly filed complaints through FIFPro and sought FIFA ethics action while asking for anonymity due to fear of reprisals.
- FIFA allegedly closed the case for insufficient evidence and exposed the names of the complainants despite the anonymity request.
- The narrator argues that Guacci avoided sanction because of institutional proximity between FIFA officials and Argentine football leaders.
- Several complainants later spoke publicly, while the coach allegedly continued working without punishment from the Argentine federation.
Alleged Financial Scheme
- The video shifts to an FBI-linked investigation into more than 300 million dollars allegedly diverted or laundered through Argentine football federation structures.
- Nine days before Argentina won the 2022 World Cup, the federation allegedly granted exclusive foreign commercial rights to a new Miami company, Tour Prenter.
- Tour Prenter was reportedly created only months earlier by Argentine theater producer and politician Faroni and his wife, with no major football track record.
- The narrator claims FIFA sent World Cup prize money directly to the Miami company instead of the federation, despite the company’s newness and lack of football history.
- The company allegedly kept a 30 percent commission, far above normal commercial agent rates, while only a fraction of the remainder reached the federation.
- Money was allegedly moved through several US banks and then into shell companies, including firms tied to people in Bariloche with unclear financial capacity.
- The narrator describes the structure as a Russian-doll scheme using fake service contracts and possible kickbacks to obscure the final beneficiaries.
Luxury Spending And Club Purchase
- The alleged diverted funds were said to finance luxury properties in Miami, private jet travel, yachts, karting expenses, and possibly a large mansion linked to federation insiders.
- The video claims related companies also helped Faroni acquire the Italian club Perugia despite concerns from Italian football authorities over financial transparency.
- The acquisition allegedly involved layered companies in England, Uruguay, Mauritius, the United States, and links to the British Virgin Islands.
- The narrator presents Molinari as a recurring figure connected to multiple entities involved in moving or recovering funds.
Political And Judicial Protection
- The narrator argues the Argentine federation was long protected by judicial and political connections, especially in Buenos Aires province.
- The video links the current pressure on the federation to tensions between President Javier Milei’s government and federation leadership over club privatization.
- The contract with the Miami company was allegedly extended until 2030, which the narrator frames as evidence of broader complicity beyond a few individuals.
- The narrator compares the case to FIFA Gate, noting that the use of US companies and banks gives US authorities jurisdiction.
FIFA Responsibility And Intimidation
- The narrator says FIFA is central to the story because it allegedly transferred funds to the Miami company and failed to audit or challenge the federation’s accounts.
- Journalists and whistleblowers who investigated the financial allegations were reportedly threatened, harassed online, censored, or stripped of accreditation.
- The narrator connects the alleged financial corruption with the earlier abuse case, arguing both show a culture of impunity around Argentine football leadership.
- The video questions the role of FIFA legal director Emilio Garcia and suggests FIFA’s relationship with South American football is politically driven.
- The narrator closes by arguing that corruption, abuse, and money laundering allegations are not limited to Argentina but reflect wider problems across FIFA-affiliated football.
Actiepunten
- Visit the publisher links in the description or comments to buy the narrator’s corruption book pack.
- Use the listed links to find the narrator’s other football books on the publisher site, Amazon, or Fnac.