Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Nicaragua. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando las entradas con la etiqueta Nicaragua. Mostrar todas las entradas

sábado, 7 de octubre de 2017

Rusia 2018 - Eliminatoria Concacaf

La eliminatoria de la Confederación de Fútbol de Norte, Centroamérica y el Caribe (Concacaf) otorga 3 plazas directas a la Copa del Mundo Rusia 2018 más un repechaje intercontinental.
De los 35 equipos inscriptos (Guadalupe, Martinica, Bonaire, Guyana Francesa, Saint Martin y Sint Maarten están afiliados a la Concacaf pero no a la FIFA), los 14 ubicados en los puestos más bajos del ranking disputan dos rondas preliminares en marzo de 2015.

PRIMERA RONDA
St. Kitts y Nevis - Turks y Caicos - Barbados - Islas Vírgenes Estadounidenses - Nicaragua
Anguilla - Islas Vírgenes Británicas - Dominica - Curaçao
Montserrat - Bahamas - Bermudas - Belice - Islas Cayman
22/3/2015: Barbados 0-1 Islas Vírgenes Estadounidenses
29/3/2015: Islas Vírgenes Estadounidenses 0-4 Barbados

23/3/2015: St. Kitts y Nevis 6-2 Turks y Caicos
26/3/2015: Turks y Caicos 2-6 St. Kitts y Nevis

23/3/2015: Nicaragua 5-0 Anguilla
31/3/2015: Anguilla 0-3 Nicaragua

25/3/2015: Bahamas 0-5 Bermudas
29/3/2015: Bermudas 3-0 Bahamas

25/3/2015: Belice 0-0 Islas Cayman
29/3/2015: Islas Cayman 1-1 Belice

26/3/2015: Islas Vírgenes Británicas 2-3 Dominica
31/3/2015: Dominica 0-0 Islas Vírgenes Británicas

27/3/2015: Curaçao 2-1 Montserrat
31/3/2015: Montserrat 2-2 Curaçao


SEGUNDA RONDA
Las 13 selecciones ubicadas en las posiciones entre los puestos 9 al 21 ingresan en la segunda ronda.  Se le suman los 7 ganadores de la Primera Ronda y se emparejan en 10 llaves. Los 10 ganadores de la Segunda Ronda y los 2 preclasificados a la Tercera Ronda se emparejan en 6 llaves.
8/6: Nicaragua 1-0 Surinam
16/6: Surinam 1-3 Nicaragua

10/6/2015: Curaçao 0-0 Cuba
14/6/2015: Cuba 1-1 Curaçao

10/6/2015: Antigua y Barbuda 1-3 Santa Lucía
14/6/2015: Santa Lucía 1-4 Antigua y Barbuda

10/6/2015: Aruba 0-2 Barbados
14/6/2015: Barbados 1-0 Aruba (*)
El partido se da por perdido a Barbados, con la victoria de Aruba por 0-3, por alineación indebida de un jugador. Aruba pasa a la Tercera Ronda.

10/6/2015: San Vicente y las Granadinas 2-2 Guyana
14/6/2015: Guyana 4-4 San Vicente y las Granadinas

11/6/2015: Rep. Dominicana 1-2 Belize
14/6/2015: Belize 3-0 Rep. Dominicana

11/6/2015: St. Kitts y Nevis 2-2 El Salvador
16/6/2015: El Salvador 4-1 St. Kitts y Nevis

12/6/2015: Guatemala 0-0 Bermudas
15/6/2015: Bermudas 0-1 Guatemala

11/6/2015: Dominica 0-2 Canadá
16/6/2015: Canadá 4-0 Dominica

12/6/2015: Puerto Rico 1-0 Grenada
16/6/2015: Grenada 2-0 Puerto Rico


TERCERA RONDA
Los 10 ganadores de la Segunda Ronda más Jamaica y Haití disputarán la Tercera Ronda, entre el 31 de agosto y el 8 de septiembre de 2015.


4/9/2015: Curaçao 0-1 El Salvador (1)
8/9/2015: El Salvador 1-0 Curaçao

4/9/2015: Canadá 3-0 Belize (2)
8/9/2015: Belize 1-1 Canadá

4/9/2015: Grenada 1-3 Haití (3)
8/9/2015: Haití 3-0 Grenada

4/9/2015: Jamaica 2-3 Nicaragua (4)
8/9/2015: Nicaragua 0-2 Jamaica

4/9/2015: San Vicente y las Granadinas 2-0 Aruba (5)
8/9/2015: Aruba 2-1 San Vicente y las Granadinas

4/9/2015: Antigua y Barbuda 1-0 Guatemala (6)
8/9/2015: Guatemala 2-0 Antigua y Barbuda


CUARTA RONDA
Finalmente, las 6 mejores selecciones del ranking (puestos 1 al 6) hacen su aparición en la cuarta ronda.
Los 2 primeros de cada grupo clasifican al Hexagonal Final.

Grupo A
Canadá - El Salvador - Honduras - México
13/11/2015: México 3-0 El Salvador
13/11/2015: Canadá 1-0 Honduras
17/11/2015: Honduras 0-2 México
17/11/2015: El Salvador 0-0 Canadá
25/3/2016: El Salvador 2-2 Honduras
29/3/2016: Honduras 2-0 El Salvador
25/3/2016: Canadá 0-3 México
29/3/2016: México 2-0 Canadá
2/9/2016: Honduras 2-1 Canadá
2/9/2016: El Salvador 1-3 México
6/9/2016: México 0-0 Honduras
6/9/2016: Canadá 3-1 El Salvador
Posiciones: México 16 (+13), Honduras 8 (0), Canadá 7 (-3), El Salvador 2 (-9).

Grupo B
Costa Rica - Haití - Jamaica - Panamá
13/11/2015: Jamaica 0-2 Panamá
13/11/2015: Costa Rica 1-0 Haití
17/11/2015: Haití 0-1 Jamaica
17/11/2015: Panamá 1-2 Costa Rica
25/3/2016: Haití 0-0 Panamá
25/3/2016: Jamaica 1-1 Costa Rica
29/3/2016: Costa Rica 3-0 Jamaica
29/3/2016: Panamá 1-0 Haití
2/9/2016: Haití 0-1 Costa Rica
2/9/2016: Panamá 2-0 Jamaica
6/9/2016: Costa Rica 3-1 Panamá
6/9/2016: Jamaica 0-2 Haití
Posiciones: Costa Rica 18 (+8), Panamá 10 (+2), Haití 4 (-2), Jamaica 4 (-8).

Grupo C
Estados Unidos - Guatemala - San Vicente y las Granadinas - Trinidad y Tobago
13/11/2015: Estados Unidos 6-1 San Vicente y las Granadinas
13/11/2015: Guatemala 1-2 Trinidad y Tobago
17/11/2015: San Vicente y las Granadinas 0-4 Guatemala
17/11/2015: Trinidad y Tobago 0-0 Estados Unidos
25/3/2016: San Vicente y las Granadinas 2-3 Trinidad y Tobago
25/3/2016: Guatemala 2-0 Estados Unidos
29/3/2016: Estados Unidos 4-0 Guatemala
29/3/2016: Trinidad y Tobago 6-0 San Vicente y las Granadinas
2/9/2016: San Vicente y las Granadinas 0-6 Estados Unidos
2/9/2016: Trinidad y Tobago 2-2 Guatemala
6/9/2016: Estados Unidos 4-0 Trinidad y Tobago
6/9/2016: Guatemala 9-3 San Vicente y las Granadinas
Posiciones: Estados Unidos 13 (+17), Trinidad y Tobago 11 (+8), Guatemala 10 (+7), San Vicente y las Granadinas 0 (-24).


HEXAGONAL FINAL

Fecha1
11/11/2016: Honduras 0-1 Panamá
11/11/2016: Trinidad y Tobago 0-2 Costa Rica
11/11/2016: Estados Unidos 1-2 México

Fecha 2
15/11/2016: Honduras 3-1 Trinidad y Tobago
15/11/2016: Panamá 0-0 México
15/11/2016: Costa Rica 4-0 Estados Unidos

Fecha 3
24/3/2017: Trinidad y Tobago 1-0 Panamá
24/3/2017: México 2-0 Costa Rica
24/3/2017: Estados Unidos 6-0 Honduras

Fecha 4
28/3/2017: Panamá 1-1 Estados Unidos
28/3/2017: Trinidad y Tobago 0-1 México
28/3/2017: Honduras 1-1 Costa Rica

Fecha 5
8/6/2017: México 3-0 Honduras
8/6/2017: Estados Unidos 2-0 Trinidad y Tobago
8/6/2017: Costa Rica 0-0 Panamá

Fecha 6
11/6/2017: México 1-1 Estados Unidos
13/6/2017: Panamá 2-2 Honduras
13/6/2017: Costa Rica 2-1 Trinidad y Tobago

Fecha 7
1/9/2017: Estados Unidos 0-2 Costa Rica
1/9/2017: Trinidad y Tobago 1-2 Honduras
1/9/2017: México 1-0 Panamá

Fecha 8
5/9/2017: Honduras 1-1 Estados Unidos
5/9/2017: Costa Rica 1-1 México
5/9/2017: Panamá 3-0 Trinidad y Tobago

Fecha 9
6/10/2017: Estados Unidos 4-0 Panamá
6/10/2017: México 3-1 Trinidad y Tobago
7/10/2017: Costa Rica - Honduras

Fecha 10
10/10/2017: Honduras 3-2 México
10/10/2017: Panamá 2-1 Costa Rica
10/10/2017: Trinidad y Tobago 2-1 Estados Unidos

Posiciones: México 21 (+9), Costa Rica 15 (+6), Panamá 13 (-1), Honduras 13 (-6), Estados Unidos 12 (+4), Trinidad y Tobago 6 (-12).

Los 3 primeros finalizados del Hexagonal Final clasifican al Mundial de Fútbol de 2018 en Rusia, mientras que Honduras, cuarto, disputará en noviembre de 2017 un Repechaje Intercontinental contra Australia.

Clasificados a Rusia 2018: México, Costa Rica y Panamá.

11/11/2017: Honduras 0-0 Australia
15/11/2017: Australia 3-1 Honduras

jueves, 27 de julio de 2017

Concacaf Gold Cup 2017: Estados Unidos campeón

Estados Unidos conquistó la 14ª edición de la Copa Oro de la Concacaf, el máximo torneo de selecciones organizado por la Confederación de Fútbol Asociación de Norte, Centroamérica y el Caribe.
Todos los resultados:

GRUPO A
Canadá - Costa Rica - Guyana Francesa - Honduras
7/7 - Harrison: Canadá 4-2 Guyana Francesa
7/7 - Harrison: Costa Rica 1-0 Honduras
11/7 - Houston: Costa Rica 1-1 Canadá
11/7 - Houston: Honduras 3-0 Guyana Francesa
14/7 - Dallas: Guyana Francesa 0-3 Costa Rica
14/7 - Dallas: Canadá 0-0 Honduras
Posiciones: Costa Rica 7 (+4), Canadá 5 (+2), Honduras 4 (+2), Guyana Francesa 1 (-8).

GRUPO B
Estados Unidos - Martinica - Nicaragua - Panamá
8/7 - Nashville: Estados Unidos 1-1 Panamá
8/7 - Nashville: Martinica 2-0 Nicaragua
12/7 - Tampa Bay: Nicaragua 1-2 Panamá
12/7 - Tampa Bay: Estados Unidos 3-2 Martinica
15/7 - Cleveland: Panamá 3-0 Martinica
15/7 - Cleveland: Estados Unidos 3-0 Nicaragua
Posiciones: Estados Unidos 7 (+4), Panamá 7 (+4), Martinica 3 (+1), Nicaragua 0 (-1).

GRUPO C
México - Curaçao - El Salvador - Jamaica
9/7 - San Diego: Curaçao 0-2 Jamaica
9/7 - San Diego: México 3-1 El Salvador
13/7 - Denver: El Salvador 2-0 Curaçao
13/7 - Denver: México 0-0 Jamaica
16/7 - San Antonio: Jamaica 1-1 El Salvador
16/7 - San Antonio: México 2-0 Curaçao
Posiciones: México 7 (+4), Jamaica 5 (+2), El Salvador 4 (0), Curaçao 0 (-6).


CUARTOS DE FINAL
19/7 - Philadelphia: Costa Rica 1-0 Panamá
19/7 - Philadelphia: Estados Unidos 2-0 El Salvador
20/7 - Phoenix: Canadá 1-2 Jamaica
20/7 - Phoenix: México 1-0 Honduras

SEMIFINALES
22/7 - Dallas: Estados Unidos 2-0 Costa Rica
23/7 - Los Angeles: Jamaica 1-0 México

FINAL
26/7 - Santa Clara: Estados Unidos 2-1 Jamaica

Repasa el historial de la Copa Oro de la Concacaf.

jueves, 28 de mayo de 2015

Corrupción en la FIFA: la acusación del Departamento de Justicia de los EEUU


Department of Justice

Office of Public Affairs

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Nine FIFA Officials and Five Corporate Executives Indicted for Racketeering Conspiracy and Corruption

The Defendants Include Two Current FIFA Vice Presidents and the Current and Former Presidents of the Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF); Seven Defendants Arrested Overseas; Guilty Pleas for Four Individual Defendants and Two Corporate Defendants Also Unsealed
A 47-count indictment was unsealed early this morning in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, charging 14 defendants with racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies, among other offenses, in connection with the defendants’ participation in a 24-year scheme to enrich themselves through the corruption of international soccer. The guilty pleas of four individual defendants and two corporate defendants were also unsealed today.

The defendants charged in the indictment include high-ranking officials of the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), the organization responsible for the regulation and promotion of soccer worldwide, as well as leading officials of other soccer governing bodies that operate under the FIFA umbrella. Jeffrey Webb and Jack Warner – the current and former presidents of CONCACAF, the continental confederation under FIFA headquartered in the United States – are among the soccer officials charged with racketeering and bribery offenses. The defendants also include U.S. and South American sports marketing executives who are alleged to have systematically paid and agreed to pay well over $150 million in bribes and kickbacks to obtain lucrative media and marketing rights to international soccer tournaments.

The charges were announced by Attorney General Loretta E. Lynch, Acting U.S. Attorney Kelly T. Currie of the Eastern District of New York, Director James B. Comey of the FBI, Assistant Director in Charge Diego W. Rodriguez of the FBI’s New York Field Office, Chief Richard Weber of the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) and Special Agent in Charge Erick Martinez of the IRS-CI’s Los Angeles Field Office.

Also earlier this morning, Swiss authorities in Zurich arrested seven of the defendants charged in the indictment, the defendants Jeffrey Webb, Eduardo Li, Julio Rocha, Costas Takkas, Eugenio Figueredo, Rafael Esquivel and José Maria Marin, at the request of the United States. Also this morning, a search warrant is being executed at CONCACAF headquarters in Miami, Florida.

The guilty pleas of the four individual and two corporate defendants that were also unsealed today include the guilty pleas of Charles Blazer, the long-serving former general secretary of CONCACAF and former U.S. representative on the FIFA executive committee; José Hawilla, the owner and founder of the Traffic Group, a multinational sports marketing conglomerate headquartered in Brazil; and two of Hawilla’s companies, Traffic Sports International Inc. and Traffic Sports USA Inc., which is based in Florida.

“The indictment alleges corruption that is rampant, systemic, and deep-rooted both abroad and here in the United States,” said Attorney General Lynch. “It spans at least two generations of soccer officials who, as alleged, have abused their positions of trust to acquire millions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks. And it has profoundly harmed a multitude of victims, from the youth leagues and developing countries that should benefit from the revenue generated by the commercial rights these organizations hold, to the fans at home and throughout the world whose support for the game makes those rights valuable. Today’s action makes clear that this Department of Justice intends to end any such corrupt practices, to root out misconduct, and to bring wrongdoers to justice – and we look forward to continuing to work with other countries in this effort.”

Attorney General Lynch extended her grateful appreciation to the authorities of the government of Switzerland, as well as several other international partners, for their outstanding assistance in this investigation.

“Today’s announcement should send a message that enough is enough,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Currie. “After decades of what the indictment alleges to be brazen corruption, organized international soccer needs a new start – a new chance for its governing institutions to provide honest oversight and support of a sport that is beloved across the world, increasingly so here in the United States. Let me be clear: this indictment is not the final chapter in our investigation.”

Acting U.S. Attorney Currie extended his thanks to the agents, analysts and other investigative personnel with the FBI New York Eurasian Joint Organized Crime Squad and the IRS-CI Los Angeles Field Office, as well as their colleagues abroad, for their tremendous effort in this case.

“As charged in the indictment, the defendants fostered a culture of corruption and greed that created an uneven playing field for the biggest sport in the world,” said Director Comey. “Undisclosed and illegal payments, kickbacks, and bribes became a way of doing business at FIFA. I want to commend the investigators and prosecutors around the world who have pursued this case so diligently, for so many years.”

“When leaders in an organization resort to cheating the very members that they are supposed to represent, they must be held accountable,” said Chief Weber. “Corruption, tax evasion and money laundering are certainly not the cornerstones of any successful business. Whether you call it soccer or football, the fans, players and sponsors around the world who love this game should not have to worry about officials corrupting their sport. This case isn't about soccer, it is about fairness and following the law. IRS-CI will continue to investigate financial crimes and follow the money wherever it may lead around the world, leveling the playing field for those who obey the law.”

The charges in the indictment are merely allegations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
The Enterpris
FIFA is composed of 209 member associations, each representing organized soccer in a particular nation or territory, including the United States and four of its overseas territories. FIFA also recognizes six continental confederations that assist it in governing soccer in different regions of the world. The U.S. Soccer Federation is one of 41 member associations of the confederation known as CONCACAF, which has been headquartered in the United States throughout the period charged in the indictment. The South American confederation, called CONMEBOL, is also a focus of the indictment.

As alleged in the indictment, FIFA and its six continental confederations, together with affiliated regional federations, national member associations and sports marketing companies, constitute an enterprise of legal entities associated in fact for purposes of the federal racketeering laws. The principal – and entirely legitimate – purpose of the enterprise is to regulate and promote the sport of soccer worldwide.

As alleged in the indictment, one key way the enterprise derives revenue is to commercialize the media and marketing rights associated with soccer events and tournaments. The organizing entity that owns those rights – as FIFA and CONCACAF do with respect to the World Cup and Gold Cup, their respective flagship tournaments – sells them to sports marketing companies, often through multi-year contracts covering multiple editions of the tournaments. The sports marketing companies, in turn, sell the rights downstream to TV and radio broadcast networks, major corporate sponsors and other sub-licensees who want to broadcast the matches or promote their brands. The revenue generated from these contracts is substantial: according to FIFA, 70% of its $5.7 billion in total revenues between 2011 and 2014 was attributable to the sale of TV and marketing rights to the 2014 World Cup.

The Racketeering Conspiracy

The indictment alleges that, between 1991 and the present, the defendants and their co-conspirators corrupted the enterprise by engaging in various criminal activities, including fraud, bribery and money laundering. Two generations of soccer officials abused their positions of trust for personal gain, frequently through an alliance with unscrupulous sports marketing executives who shut out competitors and kept highly lucrative contracts for themselves through the systematic payment of bribes and kickbacks. All told, the soccer officials are charged with conspiring to solicit and receive well over $150 million in bribes and kickbacks in exchange for their official support of the sports marketing executives who agreed to make the unlawful payments.

Most of the schemes alleged in the indictment relate to the solicitation and receipt of bribes and kickbacks by soccer officials from sports marketing executives in connection with the commercialization of the media and marketing rights associated with various soccer matches and tournaments, including FIFA World Cup qualifiers in the CONCACAF region, the CONCACAF Gold Cup, the CONCACAF Champions League, the jointly organized CONMEBOL/CONCACAF Copa América Centenario, the CONMEBOL Copa América, the CONMEBOL Copa Libertadores and the Copa do Brasil, which is organized by the Brazilian national soccer federation (CBF). Other alleged schemes relate to the payment and receipt of bribes and kickbacks in connection with the sponsorship of CBF by a major U.S. sportswear company, the selection of the host country for the 2010 World Cup and the 2011 FIFA presidential election.

The Indicted Defendants

As set forth in the indictment, the defendants and their co-conspirators fall generally into three categories: soccer officials acting in a fiduciary capacity within FIFA and one or more of its constituent organizations; sports media and marketing company executives; and businessmen, bankers and other trusted intermediaries who laundered illicit payments.

Nine of the defendants were FIFA officials by operation of the FIFA statutes, as well as officials of one or more other bodies:
  • Jeffrey Webb: Current FIFA vice president and executive committee member, CONCACAF president, Caribbean Football Union (CFU) executive committee member and Cayman Islands Football Association (CIFA) president.
  • Eduardo Li: Current FIFA executive committee member-elect, CONCACAF executive committee member and Costa Rican soccer federation (FEDEFUT) president.
  • Julio Rocha: Current FIFA development officer.  Former Central American Football Union (UNCAF) president and Nicaraguan soccer federation (FENIFUT) president.
  • Costas Takkas: Current attaché to the CONCACAF president.  Former CIFA general secretary.
  • Jack Warner: Former FIFA vice president and executive committee member, CONCACAF president, CFU president and Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation (TTFF) special adviser.
  • Eugenio Figueredo: Current FIFA vice president and executive committee member.  Former CONMEBOL president and Uruguayan soccer federation (AUF) president.
  • Rafael Esquivel: Current CONMEBOL executive committee member and Venezuelan soccer federation (FVF) president.
  • José Maria Marin: Current member of the FIFA organizing committee for the Olympic football tournaments.  Former CBF president.
  • Nicolás Leoz: Former FIFA executive committee member and CONMEBOL president.

Four of the defendants were sports marketing executives:
  • Alejandro Burzaco: Controlling principal of Torneos y Competencias S.A., a sports marketing business based in Argentina, and its affiliates. 
  • Aaron Davidson: President of Traffic Sports USA Inc. (Traffic USA). 
  • Hugo and Mariano Jinkis: Controlling principals of Full Play Group S.A., a sports marketing business based in Argentina, and its affiliates.

And one of the defendants was in the broadcasting business but allegedly served as an intermediary to facilitate illicit payments between sports marketing executives and soccer officials:
  • José Margulies:  Controlling principal of Valente Corp. and Somerton Ltd.

The Convicted Individuals and Corporations
The following individuals and corporations previously pleaded guilty under seal:

On July 15, 2013, the defendant Daryll Warner, son of defendant Jack Warner and a former FIFA development officer, waived indictment and pleaded guilty to a two-count information charging him with wire fraud and the structuring of financial transactions.

On Oct. 25, 2013, the defendant Daryan Warner waived indictment and pleaded guilty to a three-count information charging him with wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy and the structuring of financial transactions. Daryan Warner forfeited over $1.1 million around the time of his plea and has agreed to pay a second forfeiture money judgment at the time of sentencing.

On Nov. 25, 2013, the defendant Charles Blazer, the former CONCACAF general secretary and a former FIFA executive committee member, waived indictment and pleaded guilty to a 10-count information charging him with racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy, income tax evasion and failure to file a Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (FBAR). Blazer forfeited over $1.9 million at the time of his plea and has agreed to pay a second amount to be determined at the time of sentencing.

On Dec. 12, 2014, the defendant José Hawilla, the owner and founder of the Traffic Group, the Brazilian sports marketing conglomerate, waived indictment and pleaded guilty to a four-count information charging him with racketeering conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy, money laundering conspiracy and obstruction of justice. Hawilla also agreed to forfeit over $151 million, $25 million of which was paid at the time of his plea.

On May 14, 2015, the defendants Traffic Sports USA Inc. and Traffic Sports International Inc. pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy.

All money forfeited by the defendants is being held in reserve to ensure its availability to satisfy any order of restitution entered at sentencing for the benefit of any individuals or entities that qualify as victims of the defendants’ crimes under federal law.

*****
The indictment unsealed today has been assigned to U.S. District Court Judge Raymond J. Dearie of the Eastern District of New York.

The indicted and convicted individual defendants face maximum terms of incarceration of 20 years for the RICO conspiracy, wire fraud conspiracy, wire fraud, money laundering conspiracy, money laundering and obstruction of justice charges. In addition, Eugenio Figueredo faces a maximum term of incarceration of 10 years for a charge of naturalization fraud and could have his U.S. citizenship revoked. He also faces a maximum term of incarceration of five years for each tax charge. Charles Blazer faces a maximum term of incarceration of 10 years for the FBAR charge and five years for the tax evasion charges; and Daryan and Daryll Warner face maximum terms of incarceration of 10 years for structuring financial transactions to evade currency reporting requirements. Each individual defendant also faces mandatory restitution, forfeiture and a fine. By the terms of their plea agreements, the corporate defendants face fines of $500,000 and one year of probation.

The government’s investigation is ongoing.

The government’s case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Evan M. Norris, Amanda Hector, Darren A. LaVerne, Samuel P. Nitze, Keith D. Edelman and Brian D. Morris of the Eastern District of New York, with assistance provided by the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs and Organized Crime and Gang Section.

The Indicted Defendants:
ALEJANDRO BURZACO
Age:  50
Nationality: Argentina
AARON DAVIDSON
Age:  44
Nationality: USA
RAFAEL ESQUIVEL
Age:  68
Nationality: Venezuela
EUGENIO FIGUEREDO
Age:   83
Nationality: USA, Uruguay
HUGO JINKIS
Age:   70
Nationality: Argentina
MARIANO JINKIS
Age:   40
Nationality: Argentina
NICOLÁS LEOZ
Age:   86
Nationality: Paraguay
EDUARDO LI
Age:   56
Nationality: Costa Rica
JOSÉ MARGULIES, also known as José Lazaro
Age:   75
Nationality: Brazil
JOSÉ MARIA MARIN
Age:   83
Nationality: Brazil
JULIO ROCHA
Age:   64
Nationality: Nicaragua
COSTAS TAKKAS
Age:   58
Nationality: United Kingdom
JACK WARNER
Age:   72
Nationality: Trinidad and Tobago
JEFFREY WEBB
Age:   50
Nationality: Cayman Islands
The Convicted Defendants:
CHARLES BLAZER
Age:   70
Nationality: USA
JOSÉ HAWILLA
Age:   71
Nationality: Brazil
DARYAN WARNER
Age:   46
Nationality: Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada
DARYLL WARNER
Age:   40
Nationality: USA, Trinidad and Tobago
TRAFFIC SPORTS INTERNATIONAL INC.
Registered:  British Virgin Islands
TRAFFIC SPORTS USA INC.
Registered:  USA

E.D.N.Y. Docket Numbers:
United States v. Daryll Warner, 13 Cr. 402 (WFK)

United States v. Daryan Warner, 13 Cr. 584 (WFK)

United States v. Charles Blazer, 13 Cr. 602 (RJD)

United States v. José Hawilla, 14 Cr. 609 (RJD)

United States v. Traffic Sports International, Inc., 14 Cr. 609 (RJD)

United States v. Traffic Sports USA, Inc., 14 Cr. 609 (RJD)

United States v. Jeffrey Webb et al., 15 Cr. 252 (RJD)


Documents:
Webb et al. Indictment (12.25 MB)

Daryan Warner Information (320.77 KB)

Daryll Warner Information (2.26 MB)

Hawilla et al. Information (2.98 MB)

Charles Blazer Information (4.45 MB)

FIFA Graphic (490 KB)

15-677
Updated May 27, 2015


domingo, 14 de septiembre de 2014

Copa Centroamericana 2014: Costa Rica campeón

Costa Rica conquistó su octavo título de la UNCAF en en certamen que se disputó por primera vez en los Estados Unidos. Esta 13ª edición del torneo otorgó 4 plazas directas a Copa Oro: Costa Rica, Guatemala, Panamá y El Salvador.
Honduras que finalizó en 5° lugar obtiene medio cupo: disputará su lugar con la selección que finalice quita en la Caribbean Cup 2014. El ganador de este repechaje, asistirá a la Copa Oro 2015.
Además, Costa Rica ya se aseguró su plaza en la Copa América del Centenario.
La UNCAF determinó que en cada sede se lleve a cabo una jornada de tres partidos: en el Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium de Washington, en el Cotton Bowl Stadium de Dallas y en el Estadio BBVA Compass de Houston se jugó por la fase de grupos. En el estadio Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum de Los Angeles se desarrolló la jornada final.

GRUPO A
Belize - El Salvador - Guatemala - Honduras
3/9 - Washington: Honduras 2-0 Belize
3/9 - Washington: El Salvador 1-2 Guatemala
7/9 - Dallas: Guatemala 2-1 Belize
7/9 - Dallas: Honduras 0-1 El Salvador
10/9 - Houston: El Salvador 2-0 Belize
10/9 - Houston: Honduras 0-2 Guatemala
Posiciones: Guatemala 9 (+4), El Salvador 6 (+2), Honduras 3 (-1), Belize 0 (-5).

GRUPO B
Costa Rica - Nicaragua - Panamá
3/9 - Washington: Costa Rica 3-0 Nicaragua
7/9 - Dallas: Costa Rica 2-2 Panamá
10/9 - Houston: Panamá 2-0 Nicaragua
Posiciones: Costa Rica 4 (+3), Panamá 4 (+2), Nicaragua 0 (-5).


QUINTO PUESTO
13/9 - Los Angeles: Honduras 1-0 Nicaragua

TERCER PUESTO
13/9 - Los Angeles: El Salvador 0-1 Panamá

FINAL
13/9 - Los Angeles: Guatemala 1-2 Costa Rica

HISTORIAL
año - sede - campeón
1991 Costa Rica - COSTA RICA
1993 Honduras - HONDURAS
1995 El Salvador - HONDURAS
1997 Guatemala - COSTA RICA
1999 Costa Rica - COSTA RICA
2001 Honduras - GUATEMALA
2003 Panamá - COSTA RICA
2005 Guatemala - COSTA RICA
2007 El Salvador - COSTA RICA
2009 Honduras - PANAMÁ
2011 Panamá - HONDURAS
2013 Costa Rica - COSTA RICA
2014 Estados Unidos - COSTA RICA

domingo, 27 de enero de 2013

Copa Centroamericana Costa Rica 2013: Costa Rica campeón

Costa Rica conquistó la edición 2013 del torneo de selecciones antes conocido como Copa de Naciones de UNCAF, organizado por la Unión Centroamericana de Fútbol. Se disputó en el Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica entre el 18 y el 27 de enero de 2013.Los cinco primeros clasifican a la Gold Cup o Copa de Oro de la Concacaf.
Estos son todos los resultados:

Grupo A


Costa Rica - Belice - Nicaragua - Guatemala

18/1: Guatemala 1-1 Nicaragua
18/1: Costa Rica 1-0 Belice
20/1: Belice 0-0 Guatemala
20/1: Costa Rica 2-0 Nicaragua
22/1: Nicaragua 1-2 Belice
22/1: Costa Rica 1-1 Guatemala
Posiciones: Costa Rica 7 (+3); 
Belice 4 (0); Guatemala 3 (0); Nicaragua 1 (-3).

Grupo B


Honduras - El Salvador - Panamá

18/1: Honduras 1-1 El Salvador
20/1: El Salvador 0-0 Panamá
22/1: Panamá 1-1 Honduras

Posiciones: El Salvador 2 (0); Honduras 2 (0); Panamá 2 (0).

Quinto puesto
25/1: Guatemala 1-3 Panamá

Semifinales
25/1: Honduras 1-0 Belice
25/1: Costa Rica 1-0 El Salvador

Tercer puesto
27/1: Belice 0-1 El Salvador


Final
27/1: Costa Rica 1-0 Honduras




TODOS LOS CAMPEONES
Año - Sede - Campeón

1991 Costa Rica - Costa Rica
1993 Honduras - Honduras
1995 El Salvador - Honduras
1997 Guatemala - Costa Rica
1999 Costa Rica - Costa Rica
2001 Honduras - Guatemala
2003 Panamá - Costa Rica
2005 Guatemala - Costa Rica
2007 El Salvador - Costa Rica
2009 Honduras - Panamá

2011 Panamá - Honduras
2013 Costa Rica - Costa Rica


domingo, 23 de enero de 2011

Copa Centroamericana Panamá 2011: Honduras campeón

La Selección de Honduras conquistó por tercera vez la Copa Centroamericana, el torneo de selecciones antes conocido como Copa de Naciones de UNCAF, organizado por la Unión Centroamericana de Fútbol y cuya edición 2011 se disputó íntegramente en la ciudad de Panamá.
Todos los partidos se llevaron a cabo en el remodelado Estadio Rommel Fernández. Fue absolutamente remozado para los IX Juegos Deportivos Centroamericanos, y —con capacidad para 32 mil espectadores— es uno de los más modernos del área centroamericana y el mejor en el que se ha disputado esta Copa.
Los dos primeros de cada grupo clasificaron a las semifinales, y ganaron el pasaje a la Concacaf Gold Cup 2011, que se disputará entre el 5 y el 25 de junio en los Estados Unidos. Por su parte, los terceros de cada grupo quedaron eliminados de la disputa por el título de la Copa Centroamericana, pero jugaron un partido por el quinto lugar, así Guatemala obtuvo el quinto cupo a la Gold Cup o Copa de Oro.
Aquí todos los resultados:

Grupo A

Panamá - El Salvador - Belice - Nicaragua

14/1: El Salvador 2-0 Nicaragua
14/1: Panamá 2-0 Belice
16/1: Belice 2-5 El Salvador
16/1: Panamá 2-0 Nicaragua
18/1: Nicaragua 1-1 Belice
18/1: Panamá 2-0 El Salvador
Posiciones: Panamá 9 (+6); El Salvador 6 (+3); Nicaragua 1 (-4); Belice 1 (-5).

Grupo B

Costa Rica - Guatemala - Honduras

14/1: Costa Rica 1-1 Honduras
16/1: Guatemala 0-2 Costa Rica
18/1: Honduras 3-1 Guatemala
Posiciones: 
Honduras 4 (+2); Costa Rica 4 (+2); Guatemala 0 (-4).

Quinto puesto
21/1: Nicaragua 1-2 Guatemala

Semifinales
21/1: Honduras 2-0 El Salvador
21/1: Panamá 1-1 Costa Rica (2-4 en penales)

Tercer puesto
23/1: Panamá 0-0 El Salvador (5-4 en penales)

Final
23/1: Honduras 2-1 Costa Rica


El festejo catracho en Panamá.



TODOS LOS CAMPEONES
Año - Sede - Campeón

1991 Costa Rica - Costa Rica
1993 Honduras - Honduras
1995 El Salvador - Honduras
1997 Guatemala - Costa Rica
1999 Costa Rica - Costa Rica
2001 Honduras - Guatemala
2003 Panamá - Costa Rica
2005 Guatemala - Costa Rica
2007 El Salvador - Costa Rica
2009 Honduras - Panamá
2011 Panamá - Honduras

miércoles, 1 de julio de 2009

Copa Oro de la Concacaf 2009: México campeón


La Copa Oro de la CONCACAF 2009 se jugará en los Estados Unidos, con un récord de 13 ciudades diferentes, desde la apertura en el Home Depot Center en Los Angeles, el viernes 3 de julio, hasta la final, el domingo 26, en el Giants Stadium en las afueras de New York.
Como referencia del crecimiento de este torneo, la Copa del Mundo de 1994 se jugó en nueve sedes diferentes de los Estados Unidos.

Primera Ronda
GRUPO A
Canadá, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Jamaica

3/7 - Los Angeles: Canadá 1 - 0 Jamaica
3/7 - Los Angeles: Costa Rica 1 - 2 El Salvador
7/7 - Columbus: Jamaica 0 - 1 Costa Rica
7/7 - Columbus: El Salvador 0 - 1 Canadá
10/7 - Miami: Costa Rica 2 - 2 Canadá
10/7 - Miami: El Salvador 0 - 1 Jamaica

GRUPO B
Estados Unidos, Grenada, Haití, Honduras

4/7 - Seattle: Honduras 1 - 0 Haití
4/7 - Seattle: Grenada 0 - 4 Estados Unidos
8/7 - Washington: Haití 2 - 0 Grenada
8/7 - Washington: Estados Unidos 2 - 0 Honduras
11/7 - Boston: Estados Unidos 2 - 2 Haití
11/7 - Boston: Honduras 4 - 0 Grenada

GRUPO C
Guadalupe, México, Nicaragua, Panamá

5/7 - San Francisco: Panamá 1 - 2 Guadalupe
5/7 - San Francisco: Nicaragua 0 - 2 México
9/7 - Houston: Guadalupe 2 - 0 Nicaragua
9/7 - Houston: México 1 - 1 Panamá
12/7 - Phoenix: Panamá 4 - 0 Nicaragua
12/7 - Phoenix: México 2 - 0 Guadalupe

Cuartos de Final
18/7 - Philadelphia: Canadá 0 - 1 Honduras
18/7 - Philadelphia: Estados Unidos 2 - 1 Panamá
19/7 - Dallas: Guadalupe 1 - 5 Costa Rica
19/7 - Dallas: México 4 - 0 Haití

Semifinales
23/7 - Chicago: Estados Unidos 2 - 0 Honduras
23/7 - Chicago: Costa Rica 1 - 1 México / México ganó por penales 5-3

Final
26/7 - New York: Estados Unidos 0 - 5 México



HISTORIA
La Copa Oro de la CONCACAF es el torneo de naciones que se lleva a cabo cada dos años para Norte, Centroamérica y el Caribe, y es el máximo torneo de la Confederación. La Copa Oro evolucionó de una serie de campeonatos en la región desde 1941.
Antes de fundarse la CONCACAF, fútbol en la región se dividió en pequeñas zonas. Las dos organizaciones principales fueron la Confederación Centroamericana y del Caribe de Fútbol (CCCF), creada en 1938, y la North American Football Confederation (NAFC) fundada en 1946.
La CCCF tuvo 10 campeonatos entre 1941 y 1961, Costa Rica ganó siete (1941, ’46, ’48, ’53, ’55, ’60 y ’61), y El Salvador (1943), Panamá (1951) y Haití (1957) conquistaron uno cada uno. La NAFC se disputó dos veces, en 1947 y 1949, y en ambas el vencedor fue México.
En 1991 la CONCACAF comenzó con su actual estructura. Inicialmente, la Copa Oro fue un certamen de ocho equipos... hoy es un campeonato de 12 países, de las tres regiones de la CONCACAF: Norte América, Centro América (UNCAF) y el Caribe (Caribbean Football Union). Entre 1996 y 2005 incluyó a equipos invitados de Sudamérica, África y Asia.
Los Estados Unidos y México levantaron el trofeo cuatro veces cada uno, mientras que Canadá se llevó uno.

Todos los campeones:

Campeonato de la CCCF
1941 Costa Rica
1943 El Salvador
1946 Costa Rica
1948 Costa Rica
1951 Panamá
1953 Costa Rica
1955 Costa Rica
1957 Haití
1960 Costa Rica
1961 Costa Rica

Campeonato de la NAFC
1947 México
1949 México
1990 Canadá
1991 México

CONCACAF Championship
1963 Costa Rica
1965 México
1967 Guatemala
1969 Costa Rica
1971 México

Copa Oro
1991 Estados Unidos
1993 México
1996 México
1998 México
2000 Canadá
2002 Estados Unidos
2003 México
2005 Estados Unidos
2007 Estados Unidos
2009 México

sábado, 4 de octubre de 2008

Concacaf Champions League 2008/09: Atlante campeón

La Copa de Campeones de la Concacaf cambió de formato para asimilarse a la Champions League que organiza la UEFA. Con 24 equipos de 13 países, la edición 2008/09 ya está en marcha. Y aunque a los organizadores no le guste el apodo, ya toda Centroamérica la llama "la Concachamps".

RONDA PRELIMINAR
Alajuelense (Costa Rica) - Chivas USA (EE.UU.) - Hankook Verdes (Belice) - Habour View (Jamaica)
Isidro Metapán (El Salvador) - Jalapa (Guatemala) - New England Revolution (EE.UU.) - Real Estelí (Nicaragua)

26/8: Joe Public (T&T) 2 - 1 New England Revolution
26/8: Cruz Azul (México) 6 - 0 Hankook Verdes
26/8: Tauro (Panamá) 2 - 0 Chivas USA
27/8: Alajuelense 1 - 1 PR Islanders (Puerto Rico)
27/8: Impact de Montreal (Canadá) 1 - 0 Real Estelí
27/8: Isidro Metapán 2 - 2 Marathon (Honduras)
28/8: Jalapa 1 - 0 San Francisco (Panamá)

2/9: New England Revolution 0 - 4 Joe Public
2/9: Chivas USA 1 - 1 Tauro
2/9: Real Estelí 0 - 0 Impact de Montreal
3/9: PR Islanders 2 - 1 Alajuelense
3/9: Hankook Verdes 0 - 6 Cruz Azul
3/9: Marathon 2 - 1 Isidro Metapán
4/9: San Francisco 5 - 0 Jalapa
4/9: Pumas UNAM 3 - 0 Harbour View


GRUPO A
Cruz Azul (México) - DC United (EE.UU.) - Marathon (Honduras) - Saprissa (Costa Rica)

16/9: DC United 0 - 2 Saprissa
17/9: Marathon 2 - 0 Cruz Azul
23/9: Cruz Azul 4 - 0 Saprissa
24/9: Marathon 2 - 0 DC United
30/9: Saprissa 2 - 1 Marathon
1/10: DC United 0 - 1 Cruz Azul
7/10: Cruz Azul 1 - 1 Marathon
9/10: Saprissa 2 - 2 DC United
21/10: Cruz Azul 2 - 0 DC United
29/10: DC United 2 - 4 Marathon
29/10: Saprissa 1 - 0 Cruz Azul
5/11: Marathon 2 - 0 Saprissa

GRUPO B
Houston Dynamo (EE.UU.) - Luis Ángel Firpo (El Salvador) - Pumas UNAM (México) - San Francisco (Panamá)

16/9: San Francisco 1 - 1 Pumas UNAM
23/9: San Francisco 0 - 0 Houston Dynamo
24/9: Pumas UNAM 3 - 0 Luis Ángel Firpo
30/9: Pumas UNAM 4 - 4 Houston Dynamo
1/10: Luis Ángel Firpo 1 - 0 San Francisco
7/10: Houston Dynamo 2 - 1 San Francisco
9/10: Luis Ángel Firpo 1 - 1 Pumas UNAM
22/10: Houston Dynamo 1 - 3 Pumas UNAM
22/10: San Francisco 2 - 3 Luis Ángel Firpo
28/10: Luis Ángel Firpo 1 - 1 Houston Dynamo
29/10: Pumas UNAM 6 - 0 San Francisco
26/11: Houston Dynamo 1 - 0 Luis Ángel Firpo

GRUPO C
Atlante (México) - Impact de Monteal (Canadá) - Joe Public (Trinidad y Tobago) - Olimpia (Honduras)

17/9: Impact de Montreal 2 - 0 Joe Public
18/9: Atlante 1 - 0 Olimpia
24/9: Joe Public 1 - 3 Olimpia
24/9: Impact de Montreal 0 - 0 Atlante
1/10: Olimpia 1 - 2 Impact de Montreal
2/10: Atlante 0 - 1 Joe Public
8/10: Joe Public 1 - 4 Impact de Montreal
8/10: Olimpia 1 - 1 Atlante
21/10: Impact de Montreal 1 - 1 Olimpia
21/10: Joe Public 0 - 2 Atlante
28/10: Olimpia 4 - 0 Joe Public
28/10: Atlante 2 - 1 Impact de Montreal

GRUPO D
Municipal (Guatemala) - Islanders (Puerto Rico) - Santos Laguna (México) - Tauro (Panamá)

16/9: PR Islanders 2 - 1 Tauro
17/9: Santos Laguna 3 - 2 Municipal
23/9: PR Islanders 3 - 1 Santos Laguna
25/9: Tauro 2 - 1 Municipal
1/10: Municipal 2 - 2 PR Islanders
2/10: Tauro 2 - 0 Santos Laguna
8/10: Municipal 2 - 2 Tauro
8/10: Santos Laguna 3 - 0 PR Islanders
22/10: Santos Laguna 3 - 0 Tauro
23/10: PR Islanders 0 - 1 Municipal
29/10: Tauro 2 - 2 PR Islanders
30/10: Municipal 4 - 4 Santos Laguna


CUARTOS DE FINAL

24/2: Houston Dynamo 1 - 1 Atlante
25/2: Cruz Azul 1 - 0 Pumas UNAM
25/2: Impact de Montreal 2 - 0 Santos Laguna
26/2: PR Islanders 2 - 1 Marathon

3/3: Atlante 3 - 0 Houston Dynamo
4/3: Marathon 0 - 1 PR Islanders
4/3: Pumas UNAM 0 - 1 Cruz Azul
5/3: Santos Laguna 5 - 2 Impact de Montreal


SEMIFINALES

17/3: PR Islanders 2 - 0 Cruz Azul
18/3: Santos Laguna 2 - 1 Atlante

7/4: Cruz Azul 3 - 1 PR Islanders * (Cruz Azul se impuso por penales)
8/4: Atlante 3 - 1 Santos Laguna

FINALES

22/4: Cruz Azul 0 - 2 Atlante
29/4: Atlante 0 - 0 Cruz Azul

Atlante campeón de la Concacaf Champions League 2008/09.
Con este título, obtuvo el derecho de disputar el Mundial de Clubes de la FIFA, que se disputará en diciembre en los Emiratos Árabes Unidos.