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Soccer official Michel Platini arrested in 2022 World Cup investigation

The former UEFA president was arrested in relation to the awarding of the 2022 World Cup to Qatar, a judicial official said Tuesday.
Image: UEFA chief Michel Platini in Monaco
UEFA chief Michel Platini in Monaco.Valery Hache / AFP - Getty Images file

Michel Platini, the former president of European soccer's governing body, UEFA, was arrested as part of an investigation into alleged corruption surrounding the awarding of the World Cup to Qatar.

Platini was taken into custody in France on Tuesday, according to a report from news website Mediapart. The French financial prosecutor's office, the Parquet Financier, confirmed the arrest to NBC News.

Platini, once one of France's most decorated and lauded soccer players and later the holder of several senior roles at UEFA and FIFA, was detained at the Anti-Corruption Office of the Judicial Police outside Paris.

French financial prosecutors have been investigating the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups and previously questioned former FIFA president Sepp Blatter. France's financial prosecutor services opened the investigation on grounds of private corruption, criminal association, influence peddling and benefiting from influence peddling relating to the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, which were awarded to Russia and Qatar, respectively.

Platini's lawyer and adviser did not immediately answer messages from The Associated Press seeking comments.

Much intrigue has centered on Platini's decision to vote for Qatar.

Blatter, who was FIFA president at the time of the vote in 2010, blamed Platini for backing out of a secret "gentleman's agreement" to award the 2022 tournament to the United States.

Platini told the AP in 2015 that he "might have told" American officials that he would vote for the United States bid. However, he changed his mind after a November 2010 meeting, hosted by then-President Nicolas Sarkozy at his official residence in Paris and Qatar's crown prince, now Emir, Tamin bin Hamad al-Thani.

Platini has long insisted that the meeting did not influence his vote for Qatar less than two weeks later.

"Sarkozy never asked me to vote for Qatar, but I knew what would be good," he told the AP in 2015.

But Blatter claimed in a 2015 interview with the Financial Times that Platini told him ahead of the World Cup vote: "I am no longer in your picture because I have been told by the head of state that we should consider the situation of France."

Both Platini and Blatter were toppled from their positions of power at the top of soccer in 2015. Platini was banned by FIFA for financial misconduct in relation to a $2 million payment authorized by Blatter — a suspension due to expire in October.

Qatar's methods to bring the World Cup to the Middle East for the first time have been subject to investigations by FIFA. American attorney Michael Garcia found that some of Qatar's conduct "may not have met the standards" required by FIFA but concluded there was no "evidence of any improper activity by the bid team."