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Warner blasts US, Argentine surrenders

 Fallen FIFA executive Jack Warner, pictured in his office on June 6, 2015 in Chaguanas, Trinidad and Tobago, said US authorities would be unable to give him a fair trial

Fallen FIFA executive Jack Warner, pictured in his office on June 6, 2015 in Chaguanas, Trinidad and Tobago, said US authorities would be unable to give him a fair trial

PORT-OF-SPAIN, June 11- Fallen FIFA executive Jack Warner said Tuesday that US authorities would be unable to give him a fair trial, while an Argentinian businessman indicted in the soccer body’s sprawling corruption scandal handed himself over to Italian police.

Warner, a former schoolteacher and Trinidadian ex-minister of national security at the heart of the criminal case engulfing football’s world body, is the subject of a US request to have him extradited from Trinidad.

The 72-year-old said the United States is not the “appropriate jurisdiction” to handle the matter “fairly” and claimed America is trying to exact revenge because it tried but failed to lobby FIFA to host the 2022 World Cup.

“One must be extremely careful to question whether the United States can be fair in taking action against officials of an international body whom it feels has done it wrong,” Warner wrote in an editorial in the weekly Sunshine newspaper, which he owns.

Currently, US prosecutors accuse 14 people of taking part in a sweeping kickbacks scheme going back 20 years involving a total of $150 million in bribes.

The revelations have thrown the soccer world into turmoil and led to the resignation of long-serving FIFA president Sepp Blatter last week, just four days after his re-election to a fifth consecutive term.

Warner called the United States two-faced, since he and Blatter had once been welcomed to the White House by President Barack Obama.

“Was the president of the United States seeking a strong lobby from a FIFA vice president or was he ‘bribing’ a FIFA official with a visit and a meal to the White House? I think not,” Warner said.

“In each case, the answer is no, but it just goes to show how selective this ‘bribe’ issue can be,” he added.

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– Argentinian hands himself in –

Among those indicted is Argentine sports marketing executive Alejandro Burzaco. He turned himself in to police in Italyy after initially fleeing authorities.

Burzaco, 50, was held in Bolzano, near Italy’s northern border with Switzerland after “turning up spontaneously” at a police station with his two lawyers, police said in a statement.

Burzaco’s whereabouts had been a mystery since seven FIFA executives were arrested in the Swiss city of Zurich on May 27, the eve of a FIFA Congress.

According to reports, Burzaco was in the hotel where the executives were cuffed and promptly disappeared in the knowledge he was likely to be on the indicted list.

It is believed he was not in his hotel room at the time because he was having breakfast.

After he turned himself in, Burzaco was briefly detained in a cell and was then allowed to leave the police station but placed under house arrest, Italian news agency AGI reported.

The Argentinian, who also has Italian citizenship, had already rented a house near Bolzano in expectation of being placed under house arrest, reports said.

Burzaco is wanted by US authorities in connection with his role as president of sports marketing company Torneos y Competencias.

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The US suspects him of paying tens of millions of dollars in bribes to win and retain the media rights contracts for football tournaments in Latin America.

The Torneos y Competencias company held the television rights for the Argentinian league between 1992-2009 and in association with Aaron Davidson, president of Traffic Sports USA who was arrested in Zurich, and another company, Full Play, hold the rights for the Copa America tournament that kicks off in Chile next month.

The whereabouts of Full Play owners, Argentine father and son Hugo and Mariano Jinkis, are unknown.

USA head coach Jurgen Klinsmann, a World Cup-winning striker for West Germany in 1990, said Tuesday he expects there to be more revelations in the scandal.

“If there is one thing I know for sure, when the American authorities have evidence, then they see things through and more things will come out,” Klinsmann said in Cologne ahead of a friendly match against Germany.

“The whole world is wishing that FIFA will be cleaned up and those who comply will do things differently in the long term.”

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