BUENOS AIRES, Argentina — A former Argentine
government official threw himself in front of a train and killed himself
after being accused of taking bribes, the latest fallout from a
widespread corruption probe in professional soccer that has implicated
businessmen and top officials in several countries.
Jorge Delhon, a lawyer who worked in the
administration of former Argentina President Cristina Fernandez, killed
himself on Tuesday by jumping in front of a train in Buenos Aires.
A ministry official in Buenos Aires province
confirmed the death. The official spoke to The Associated Press on
condition of anonymity because he wasn't authorized to speak on the
subject.
"I love you all," Delhon wrote in a suicide
note to his family, the ministry official told The Associated Press. "I
can't believe (what's happening)."
Don Emmert / AFP - Getty Images
The suicide came just hours after sports
marketing executive Alejandro Burzaco told a judge in New York he had
paid millions in bribes to Delhon and Pablo Paladino in exchange for TV
production rights to soccer matches.
Paladino worked for the now defunct government
program Futbol para Todos (Football for All), which broadcast local
soccer matches on public TV. Delhon worked under Fernandez's chief of
staff, and dealt with Futbol para Todos.
Paladino rejected Burzaco's claims, saying Futbol para Todos didn't have the budget or ability to make spending decisions.
"We could only broadcast," he told The Associated Press.
Paladino also said Fernandez's administration called the shots.
"They were politically responsible for the
country. They took the political decisions, they bought the rights and
later, in a third instance, there was a show like ours, where there were
administrative issues in the cabinet chief's office," he said. "All we
had to do was to broadcast it."
The Fernandez government, which ended in 2015,
created the free-to-air soccer program on Argentine public television.
While giving more free access to Argentine soccer fans, Fernandez was
sharply criticized for using the program to promote her government.
Earlier this year, an Argentine court opened
criminal proceedings against two of Fernandez's former chiefs of staff —
Anibal Fernandez (no relation) and Jorge Capitanich — for allegedly
taking public funds earmarked for Futbol para Todos.
Burzaco's testimony continued Wednesday. He
was testifying under a plea agreement against three former South
American soccer officials accused of taking bribes in a sprawling
corruption investigation of FIFA, the sport's governing body.
Jose Maria Marin, Manuel Burga and Juan Angel
Napout have pleaded not guilty to charges they took part in a 24-year
scheme involving at least $150 million in bribes that secured
broadcasting and hosting rights for soccer tournaments around the globe.
More than 40 other officials and business
executives been charged. Many, including Burzaco, have pleaded guilty in
hopes of receiving reduced sentences.
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