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・ 2015 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship Division B
・ 2015 FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women
・ 2015 FIBA Intercontinental Cup
・ 2015 FIBA Oceania Championship
・ 2015 FIBA Oceania Under-16 Championship
・ 2015 FIBA Oceania Women's Championship
・ 2015 FIBA South America Under-17 Championship
・ 2015 FIBA Under-19 World Championship
・ 2015 FIBA Under-19 World Championship for Women
・ 2015 FIFA Ballon d'Or
・ 2015 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup
・ 2015 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup Final
・ 2015 FIFA Beach Soccer World Cup qualification (UEFA)
・ 2015 FIFA Club World Cup
・ 2015 FIFA Club World Cup squads
2015 FIFA corruption case
・ 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup
・ 2015 FIFA U-17 World Cup squads
・ 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup
・ 2015 FIFA U-20 World Cup squads
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Final
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group A
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group B
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group C
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group D
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group E
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup Group F
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup knockout stage
・ 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup qualification


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2015 FIFA corruption case : ウィキペディア英語版
2015 FIFA corruption case

In 2015, U.S. federal prosecutors disclosed cases of corruption by officials and associates connected with FIFA, the governing body of association football, futsal and beach soccer.
Near the end of May 2015, fourteen people were indicted in connection with an investigation by the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division (IRS-CI) into wire fraud, racketeering, and money laundering. The United States Attorney General simultaneously announced the unsealing of the indictments and the prior guilty pleas by four football executives and two corporations.
The investigation mostly revolved around collusion between officials of continental football bodies CONMEBOL (South America) and CONCACAF (Caribbean, Central and North America), and sports marketing executives. The sports marketing executives were holders of media and marketing rights for high-profile international competitions including the Americas' FIFA World Cup qualifying tournaments, and showpiece tournaments CONCACAF Gold Cup and Copa América.
CONCACAF President Jeffrey Webb, also serving president of the Cayman Islands Football Association, was arrested in connection with the investigation, as were two sitting FIFA Executive Committee members: Eduardo Li of the Costa Rican Football Federation and Eugenio Figueredo, formerly of the Uruguayan Football Association and former CONMEBOL President Nicolás Leoz. The investigation lasted several years, with the first arrest, of Warner's son Daryll, made in July 2013.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2015/05/27/sports/soccer/document-fifa-indictments.html )
In total, seven current FIFA officials were arrested at the Hotel Baur au Lac in Zürich on May 27. They were preparing to attend the 65th FIFA Congress, which was scheduled to include the election of the president of FIFA. They are expected to be extradited to the United States on suspicion of receiving in bribes.〔 There was also a simultaneous raid on the CONCACAF headquarters in Miami, and later, two further men handed themselves in to police for arrest: former CONCACAF president Jack Warner and marketing executive Alejandro Burzaco.〔〔
The arrests case triggered Australia,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Fifa crisis: Australian police agree to look into $500,000 paid to Jack Warner )〕 Colombia,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Colombia joins investigation into FIFA corruption )〕 Costa Rica,〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Costa Rica Prosecutors Open Investigation into Arrest of FIFA Official Eduardo Li )〕 and Switzerland〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Fifa scandal: What took Switzerland so long to investigate? )〕 to open or intensify separate criminal investigations into top FIFA officials for corruption.
==Allegations==
The 2015 arrests center on the alleged use of bribery, fraud and money laundering to corrupt the issuing of media and marketing rights for FIFA games in the Americas, estimated at $150 million,〔 including at least $110 million in bribes related to the Copa América Centenario to be hosted in 2016 in the United States. In addition, the indictment handed down by the U.S. District Court in Brooklyn, New York, alleges that bribery was used in an attempt to influence clothing sponsorship contracts, the selection process for the 2010 FIFA World Cup host, and the 2011 FIFA presidential election.〔 Specifically, an unnamed sports equipment company – identified in multiple sources as Nike, Inc. – is alleged to have paid at least $40 million in bribes to become the sole provider of uniforms, footwear, accessories, and equipment to the Brazil national team.〔
In 2011, Phaedra Al-Majid, who was part of the successful 2022 Qatari World Cup Bid, came forward as a whistle-blower. She claimed that Qatar paid $1.5 Million to African Football Confederation president Issa Hayatou, Ivory Coast Fifa member Jacques Anouma and Nigeria's suspended official Amos Adamu to vote for Qatar; all three denied the allegations. She later stated that she had fabricated her claims for media attention. Al-Majid co-operated with the Garcia Report.〔 In November 2014, she stated that she was coerced into withdrawing her allegations as she feared for her safety and due to her lack of legal representation. As of June 2015, she was in FBI protective custody, when she stated, "The FBI have everything... There are people who are annoyed with me (speaking out ), and what really irks them is that I'm a female, Muslim whistleblower.... I just don't think Blatter actually intends to quit. Everything he does is very calculated. He'll try very hard to save himself, I'm sure of it."
In December 2010, the FBI's New York office began investigating American soccer executive and CONCACAF official Chuck Blazer as a spin-off of an unrelated organized crime investigation, and in August 2011, IRS-CI's Los Angeles office began investigating Blazer's alleged failure to file personal income tax returns. In December 2011, IRS-CI became aware of what the FBI was up to from news reports and the two offices began a joint investigation of Blazer.〔 They were investigating Blazer's involvement in the bidding process for host countries for the FIFA World Cups from the early 1990s onwards. (The United States is one of two countries that broadly exercises worldwide jurisdiction to tax the net income of its citizens from any source in the world, requires taxpayers to report and pay tax on illegal income, and also exercises worldwide jurisdiction over all financial institutions with U.S.-based account holders.)
In November 2013, Blazer pleaded guilty to 10 criminal charges including wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering, and offenses involving income tax and banking. Blazer's guilty plea had aimed to stave off a more serious charge of racketeering, which carried a potential 20-year prison sentence. Blazer would later make secret recordings of meetings with FIFA officials, and allegedly carried a recording device concealed in a key ring during the 2012 Summer Olympics in London. The information against Blazer (the charging document used in lieu of an indictment for a plea bargain) was revealed on May 27, 2015, the same day that the arrests were made in Zurich.
In May 2011, ''The Sunday Times'' published claims from a whistle-blower that President of CAF Issa Hayatou had, along with fellow Executive Committee member Jacques Anouma, accepted $1.5 million bribes from Qatar to secure his support for their bid for the 2022 FIFA World Cup.
In 2013, former FIFA President João Havelange and the Brazilian Football Confederation President Ricardo Teixeira were both found to have taken bribes worth millions of dollars. FIFA executive committee member was sanctioned with a lifetime ban for bribery and corruption.

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