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Author Topic: Centre of Excellence Thread.  (Read 30201 times)

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Offline Football supporter

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #90 on: April 22, 2013, 12:15:21 AM »
A high-level committee in the Caribbean comprised of a former Chief Justice, a forensic auditor and a US federal court judge has issued a report on the financial management of CONCACAF with big implications – and one key question – for Australia.

Just when did Australian World Cup Bid officials realise they had been taken for a ride?

They certainly didn’t want to believe it when I told them – on numerous occasions – before I was sacked by Ben Buckley in January 2010.

Was it when they turned up at the Trinidad and Tobago football centre of excellence (COE) in Macoya in August 2010 for a visit with Jack Warner and his underlings?

Alarm bells should have been ringing as soon as they saw the bust of Joao Havelange at the front of the complex. The COE comprises a hotel, swimming pool, convention centre, multi-story health club and the Marvin Lee football stadium. Only the year before artificial turf had been laid on the order of FIFA’s local development officer – one of Jack Warner’s sons.

But somehow, a visiting Australian delegation decided it was worthwhile spending US$462,200 of our hard-earned money on ‘upgrading’ the Marvin Lee stadium. What for?

Well, it was nothing to do with Jack Warner’s vote for the World Cup of course. For a start, Jack had learned not to directly discuss his vote in person. He confined such discussions to his friend and personal PR advisor, and FFA’s highest-profile consultant, Peter Hargitay. Warner had tried to convince the former England bid leader, Lord David Triesman, to make a similar investment about one year earlier. When Jack nominated his personal account to receive US$2.5 million for vague good works, Triesman looked at his watch and departed.

England didn’t get Warner’s vote. But then neither did Australia.

Why is this relevant now? Well click here for the report released on the weekend of the forensic investigation into two decades of creative accounting by Jack Warner and Chuck Blazer. The word “allegations” is there 22 times; “misappropriate” gets 26 mentions; and “fraud” scores 44 hits. Get past the contents and the executive summary – where Australia is mentioned – and find page 96.

Following the visit in August 2010, the Aussie cheque turns up one month later.

The account name given to FFA sounded ok, so apparently there was no need for due diligence, and a cheque was presented for the ‘stadium upgrade’ of US$462,200. By the time you add-in the costs of travelling there – presumably with consultant in tow – at least twice, the total bill would have amounted to more than half-a-million dollars.

The Caribbean investigative team published that Australia’s money isn’t mentioned in any financial records. It disappeared. Evaporated. The bank account it went to wasn’t anything to do with football. It was a Warner personal account. The report concludes that Warner “misappropriated” the money and committed a “fraud”.

But, back home, someone forgot to mention it also.

FFA neglected to disclose this generous grant. Where did the money come from? Our taxes? FFA general revenue? An offshore account of the Chairman? There is no public record of the donation; no media release; no mention in FFA’s 2011 Final Report to the Government on the World Cup Bid; and nothing about it in FFA’s annual financial statements for 2010-11.

Why did FFA not shout from the rooftops about this act of great Aussie generosity? Why didn’t FFA get up and talk about it? Why wasn’t there a picture opportunity?

Was it because – just like the all expenses paid trip to Cyprus of the Trinidad and Tobago U-20 team – someone knew that some of us might not see this gesture in quite the same light as they did? Does this generous gesture also need forensic analysis?

And who got us into this? What was the role of Peter Hargitay?

We know that in September 2010, Hargitay was busy elsewhere in the Caribbean: he was photographed with FFA’s John Boultbee as an MOU was signed with the Jamaican FA for access of up to $2.5 million of Australian taxpayers’ money. On that occasion, Hargitay is alleged to have been paid three times over: by FFA, the Jamaican FA and on commission from a shirt company to sell football shirts.

So today, we hang our heads in embarrassment.

Our World Cup bid was scrutinised by agencies and we were assured by a slew of public figures that it was clean. But I guess that depends on one’s definition of ‘clean’ doesn’t it?

Investigators half a world away have shown us the evidence of what should have been revealed by our own people.

The FFA must reveal the date when they first heard from the Caribbean that something had gone dreadfully wrong with our donation. And they should explain why they didn’t make it public.

Will FFA get the taxpayers’ money back? Will FIFA Ethics Committee member, Les Murray, assist them? Will the Australian Federal Police take an interest? And will the Government seek a proper audit this time?

Whatever the answer to those questions, one thing’s for sure: FFA know they can’t say didn’t know and that they weren’t warned. And they know that I know.

By the way, in one final irony – Jack Warner is Minister for National Security in Trinidad and Tobago. The police and the fraud squad answer to him.

http://sportsbusinessinsider.com.au/news/sport/football/ffa-pays-462200-for-stadium-upgrade-in-the-caribbean/

Offline davyjenny1

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #91 on: April 22, 2013, 02:31:40 AM »
  Centre of Excellence questions may go before the courts
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the impossible lies in a person determination.

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Offline Football supporter

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #92 on: April 22, 2013, 06:40:33 AM »
  Centre of Excellence questions may go before the courts

There are many investigations that should take place. Certainly the DPP should instruct Williams to order an investigation by FIU. There are massive implications surrounding the CoE funding. First Citizens need to explain themselves regarding standard checks that should have been made. Also, with so much dodgy money sloshing around T&T banks, questions need to be asked why alarm bells didn't ring.

The problem is that the Government will have no interest in uncovering further offenses.  It was always believed that JW co-mingled funds. If a CONCACAF dollar went to the election campaign, the Govt must resign. Also, Larry Howai probably won't want an investigation of First Citizens.

This is where the President and the DPP must use their independence to force the issue and stand up for the citizens of T&T.

Offline fishs

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #93 on: April 22, 2013, 07:02:53 AM »

 The President and the DPP don't do investigations is the police or integrity committee or even BIR that could do that and then recommend charges.

 Imagine the police take 50 odd days for the accident in sealots, the soldier that get murdered in Chag base, the Glen Ashby case and numerous others ent reach no way. What you think going an happen with this ?
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Offline BBL

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #94 on: April 22, 2013, 07:52:18 AM »
So in a nutshell...

There are three parcels of land that the COE is built on. Jack Warner owns all of these.
He was able to buy them with funds from grants

FIFA and CONCACAF paid the money for the COE.
The asset was then mortgaged against by JW.
FIFA pay the mortgage.

In 2009, JW's son as Caribbean development officer ordered FIFA to lay a new pitch.
In 2010, the Australian FA paid $450k+ to JW (the bank account was in the name of CONCACAF, but was a personal account) to upgrade the Marvin Lee stadium. The funds were misappropriated.

Is that it? I'm having problems understanding where the land money came from.

Offline Football supporter

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #95 on: April 22, 2013, 07:59:46 AM »

 The President and the DPP don't do investigations is the police or integrity committee or even BIR that could do that and then recommend charges.

 Imagine the police take 50 odd days for the accident in sealots, the soldier that get murdered in Chag base, the Glen Ashby case and numerous others ent reach no way. What you think going an happen with this ?

Well, I don't fully understand the T&T constitution, but I believed that the President has the ability to raise concerns about issues affecting the citizens and demand action from the Government. If he feels that the government is failing the people, is there action he can take?

Again, without knowing the system inside out, if the DPP has a reasonable belief that a crime has taken place and has evidence that would support that belief, can he not request an investigation to allow him to successfully prosecute the case?

Offline asylumseeker

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #96 on: April 22, 2013, 12:09:33 PM »
... tsunami heading Down Under.

To some degree, in the result, the region reads as "competent" rather than "incompetent" as framed by Mersiades ... and, of course, she smells blood and feels vindicated by the findings.

Offline sjahrain

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #97 on: April 22, 2013, 04:38:53 PM »
Now lets see how the politricksters front this,as each would want to cover his backside,today its you tomorrow it could me
The ants nest just got roused,very soon the ants would be coming out with a vengence....CRY BLOOD
This is the right for Anil to be kissing the TTFF butt

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Jack is for you...playing smart but being clever.....ENOUGH
Thanks for the DRAMA...... :devil:

Offline Deeks

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #98 on: April 22, 2013, 07:03:29 PM »
So in a nutshell...

There are three parcels of land that the COE is built on. Jack Warner owns all of these.
He was able to buy them with funds from grants

FIFA and CONCACAF paid the money for the COE.
The asset was then mortgaged against by JW.
FIFA pay the mortgage.

In 2009, JW's son as Caribbean development officer ordered FIFA to lay a new pitch.
In 2010, the Australian FA paid $450k+ to JW (the bank account was in the name of CONCACAF, but was a personal account) to upgrade the Marvin Lee stadium. The funds were misappropriated.

Is that it? I'm having problems understanding where the land money came from.

Lever Bros?. That used to be Lever Bros Grounds at one time.

Offline Deeks

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Re: Centre of Excellence questions.
« Reply #99 on: April 22, 2013, 07:09:49 PM »
TT football teams will pay a hefty price. They will be cheated with dubious calls. "payback for JW". I know Guatemala has it in for Jack. When he won Concacf president he moved the HQ from Guat. City to NY. They were pissed.

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Re: The Jack Warner Thread.
« Reply #100 on: April 16, 2014, 12:38:21 AM »
Football body freezes Centre of Excellence asset.
By Ria Taitt Political Editor (Express).


CONCACAF BLOCKS JACK

CONCACAF is challenging Jack Warner’s claim to ownership of the coveted Centre of Excellence in Tunapuna.

The Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) has filed a caveat against Warner, preventing him from passing title of the Centre of Excellence to any person or body.

It is also claiming it made a significant financial contribution, to the tune of $103 million, towards the purchase of the property and construction of the Centre of Excellence.

CONCACAF has filed three documents in the Trinidad and Tobago High Court, which have been obtained by this newspaper from the Registrar General’s department, which revealed the football body claims an equitable interest in three properties “owned” by Mr Warner.

The Centre of Excellence also comprises Marvin Lee Stadium and a swimming pool.

Warner has claimed the land on which the Centre of Excellence stands was a gift from former FIFA president Joao Havelange.

CONCACAF however had always contended that Warner deceived the body into believing it owned the property and this was the basis on which it had made the investment in its purchase and construction.

According to the legal documents, the basis of this claim is that CONCACAF provided funds for the acquisition for the Centre of Excellence to the tune of $103 million (US$16 million).

The caveat states these monies were provided “for the purpose of and in connection with its functions as the regional soccer federation for North and Central America and the Caribbean, with the intention that the Centre of Excellence and the said lands on which it is constructed and all improvements thereto would be owned by CONCACAF”.

Attorneys acting for CONCACAF filed the caveat with the Registrar General’s department on March 28, 2013, via its attorneys, JD Sellier & Co.

The caveat effectively blocks Warner from mortgaging, leasing or selling the Centre of Excellence. Any prospective purchaser who does a title search on the property will in fact discover this caveat, which can only be removed by CONCACAF itself or by a court order.

This effectively freezes the crown jewel in the massive estate of the Warner empire as it fetters his ability to dispose of the valuable asset.

The matter, though filed since last year, has only come to a head because it is understood Warner has in fact been quietly seeking a purchaser for the Centre of Excellence on the international market.

He has made no moves to dispute the claim made in the caveat filed by CONCACAF for an equitable interest for an amount exceeding “$16M USD”.

Legal sources have revealed the multimillion-dollar claim was made by CONCACAF’s lawyers and is expected to be filed shortly.

In this claim, CONCACAF would be seeking a judgment for repayment of the funds advanced to Warner for the property and failure to repay by him would enable the body to levy on the property.

Warner has been the focus of attention since his advent into the political arena.

RELATED NEWS

Jack Blocked.
By Jada Loutoo (Newsday).


The Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) has filed a caveat against Independent Labour Party (ILP) political leader Jack Warner’s Centre of Excellence property in Macoya.

Newsday obtained copies of the caveat filed in the Registrar General’s Department on March 28, 2013, by CONCACAF by its local attorney Steven Michael Paul, of JD Sellier and Company.

The documents reveal that the football body is claiming equitable interests in three properties owned by Warner.

The caveat was to be served on Warner’s Renraw Investments Limited and First Citizens Bank, according to the documents.

In the caveat filed by CONCACAF, the body claims it provided funds for the acquisition of land and the construction of the Centre of Excellence to the tune of over $103 million (US$16 million).

According to the documents obtained by Newsday, these monies were provided “for the purpose of and in connection with its functions as the regional soccer federation for North and Central America and the Caribbean with the intention that the Centre of Excellence and the said lands on which it is constructed and all improvements thereto would be owned by CONCACAF.”

This move by CONCACAF effectively freezes the ILP leader’s ability to dispose of the Centre of Excellence, considered to be the crown jewel of Warner’s assets.

According to sources, the caveat effectively blocks Warner from mortgaging, leasing or selling the Centre of Excellence.

“Any prospective purchaser who does a title search on the property will discover the caveat which can only be removed by CONCACAF itself or a court order,” the source said.

Newsday was reliably informed that Warner had intentions of seeking a buyer on the international market for the Centre of Excellence and had been quietly holding discussions with a private international consortium for the sale.

It was following this that agents for the prospective buyer did a title search on the property when CONCACAF’s caveat was discovered.

Contacted by Newsday yesterday, Warner would only say it was CONCACAF’s right. Asked whether he was seeking an international buyer for the Centre of Excellence, Warner said he had nothing more to say.

Legal sources have revealed a multi-million dollar claim has been made by CONCACAF’s lawyers and is expected to be filed shortly as they seek to recover their interests.

In 2012, football’s governing body FIFA said Warner owned the Dr Joao Havelange Centre of Excellence.

At a football congress in Budapest in May 2012, CONCACAF president Jeffrey Webb, who was recently in Trinidad, raised irregularities revolving around the ownership of the Centre of Excellence.

CONCACAF also said it had begun legal steps to recover the facility from Warner, who resigned in 2011 as CONCACAF president and FIFA vice-president amidst a bribery scandal involving alleged bribes-for-votes among Caribbean Football Union (CFU) officials for FIFA presidential candidate Mohamed bin Hammam, who was expelled from his FIFA post.

It was alleged Warner got an unauthorised mortgage on the Macoya property in 2007. FIFA was also said to be joining legal action to regain ownership of the centre that it paid for.

FIFA president Sepp Blatter said at a news conference in May 2012, it was “now a problem that we are going to tackle”.

Warner claimed he had a letter which proved that the CONCACAF Centre of Excellence was a gift from Brazilian-born former FIFA president Joao Havelange (1974-1998) to the Caribbean Football Union, of which he was also former president.

The Centre of Excellence, named after Havelange, includes a swimming complex, a lavish garden sanctuary, a fitness centre, a 44-room hotel, an 800-capacity theatre, a banquet and reception hall, as well as several other meeting halls. The Marvin Lee Stadium is also part of the centre.

In a report commissioned by CONCACAF and presented to its congress in April, last year, Sir David Simmons, head of the body’s integrity committee, accused Warner and others of being “fraudulent in their management” of the football confederation’s affairs.

Simmons said Warner did not disclose to CONCACAF or FIFA that a US$25.9 million Centre of Excellence was built on land owned by his companies. “Approximately US$26 million of CONCACAF funds went into Centre of Excellence and that is no longer an asset of CONCACAF,” said Simmons.

The Integrity Committee reported that the centre in which CONCACAF invested at least US$25.9 million, some of which included loans from FIFA, was built on land owned by Warner privately and not the confederation.

“Warner represented to FIFA that funds would be used to support development but never told FIFA that centre would be situated on land owned by his companies,” said Simmons. “There is no evidence that Warner or anyone else ever disclosed to the CONCACAF executive committee or congress that lands on which the centre was built was owned by his companies,” he said.

Simmons said that in deals surrounding the centre, Warner “deceived persons and organisations” into believing the facility was CONCACAF’s and not his.

« Last Edit: April 16, 2014, 02:24:17 AM by Flex »

Offline Tiresais

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Re: Re: The Jack Warner Thread.
« Reply #101 on: April 16, 2014, 04:50:18 AM »
Finally! What took them so long? Hope they take him to the cleaners

Offline D.H.W

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Re: Re: The Jack Warner Thread.
« Reply #102 on: April 16, 2014, 06:33:33 AM »
Your move Jack
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Offline King Deese

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Re: Re: The Jack Warner Thread.
« Reply #103 on: April 16, 2014, 10:10:57 AM »
Better late than never. Somehow, I get the orgasmic feeling this is not the end of it. Something else is coming behind this. Could it be the tsunami Jackarse was talking about? TTFA and FIFA say it is so. In a way, the Ugly One was right, it was used for development. But nobody in FIFA, CFU, TTFA, and CONCACAF bothered to ask, what development.
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Offline weary1969

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Re: Re: The Jack Warner Thread.
« Reply #104 on: April 16, 2014, 10:47:35 AM »
Your move Jack

In the 12pm news cnc 3: Jack Warner promises to sell all his possessions for one dollar if it can be proved he is trying to sell the Center of Excellence.
« Last Edit: April 16, 2014, 10:52:07 AM by weary1969 »
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Offline Tallman

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Warner: Centre of Excellence not for sale, never wa
« Reply #105 on: April 16, 2014, 02:49:53 PM »
Warner: Centre of Excellence not for sale, never was
T&T Express


Member of Parliament for Chaguanas West Jack Warner today responded to newspaper reports that CONCACAF had taken legal action preventing him from selling the Centre of Excellence in Macoya. Warner said the Centre of Excellence is not for sale, and never was. The following is Warner's statement -

I promised never to respond to any article written about Jack Warner in relation to CONCACAF and FIFA but two articles, “CONCACAF Blocks Jack” - Express and "BLOCKED" - Newsday, which are nothing more than blatant and outright lies have forced me to respond.

The contents of these articles I was told by some of my former Cabinet colleagues were discussed in Cabinet only last week Thursday.

So now that the Government is in trouble it does not surprise me that a Jack Warner/CONCACAF story is their medium for distraction.

The truth is, if anyone can come forward with an iota of evidence to support that the Centre of Excellence is being sold by Jack Warner to any consortium of businessmen, local or foreign, I will sell all my worldly possessions to that person for one dollar.

One Dollar!

But I am not fazed because I was told by my friends in Government that this is just the beginning of many attacks to be leveled against Jack Warner to discredit me as a person and as a threat to the political landscape.

My sources have even told me that this is a personal attack against me by the Attorney General and advised that I should not be shocked if he himself called CONCACAF to pursue this action. That an Attorney General can influence the local media to such an extent is simply frightening.

However, if CONCACAF indeed has filed a caveat against me all I can say is that both CONCACAF and FIFA have unlimited funding and they can spend their money as they wish if they want to do that.

But if FIFA and CONCACAF wish to allow this People’s Partnership Government to influence them to become embroiled in the locally immoral and corrupt politics, this is sad and disturbing.

The Press must emerge as a credible institution. This is the same local Press that found one hundred DEA agents in Trinidad.

This is the same local Press that cannot even inform us about outstanding stories such as e-mailgate, the multi-million dollar drug bust, the hit and run of a Chaguanas West constituent by the Attorney General’s driver, the use of confidential information from a police file, among many others.
I wish to state categorically that the Centre of Excellence is not for sale.

Let me also state that CONCACAF does not have any equitable interest in the Centre of Excellence and has no claims to ownership.

I also wish to state that the Centre of Excellence is not in financial trouble.

Instead of seeking to discredit Jack Warner I wish to advise the “Piggy Partnership” to focus on correcting the sexual immorality and corruption scandals that are now plaguing the coalition and leave Jack Warner alone.

Jack Warner
April 16, 2014
The Conquering Lion of Judah shall break every chain.

Offline Tiresais

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #106 on: April 16, 2014, 03:12:47 PM »
Great, then he can just transfer the ownership to the TTFA or Concacaf and be done with it, right? I mean he's not going to sell it but he doesn't know what his children and grandchildren will do, so best set its ownership with those who can be entrusted to use it in the Caribbeans' interest right?

Offline Sando

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #107 on: April 17, 2014, 03:25:16 AM »
Lovely news but I just have a feeling Jack will escape.

He always does.


Offline Tiresais

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #108 on: April 17, 2014, 06:35:24 AM »
That's his Modus Operandi, I half expect him to give death the slip too - Warner for 2050 president!

Offline Jack Horner

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #109 on: April 17, 2014, 09:56:19 AM »
Lovely news but I just have a feeling Jack will escape.

He always does.



We have some smart people here, especially when they are targeting a man with no proof, they just going on senless report from a government with corruption everyday taking place.

Tell them Jack.

The COE will be in the Warner family forever.

FIFA, Concascaf, TTFA, Anand Ramlogan, bring all the fire and Jack will be here forever.

Tell Ramlogan his time coming very soon, remember, Jack have your secrets.

***message senbt from Tim Kee's office***

Jack Warner will rise again and the world will beg him him to return and he will say "NO".............

Offline lefty

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #110 on: April 17, 2014, 10:10:10 AM »
Lovely news but I just have a feeling Jack will escape.

He always does.



We have some smart people here, especially when they are targeting a man with no proof, they just going on senless report from a government with corruption everyday taking place.

Tell them Jack.

The COE will be in the Warner family forever.

FIFA, Concascaf, TTFA, Anand Ramlogan, bring all the fire and Jack will be here forever.

Tell Ramlogan his time coming very soon, remember, Jack have your secrets.

***message senbt from Tim Kee's office***


yuh keyboard malfunctionin' or yuh jus cyar spell ???
I pity the fool....

Offline Tiresais

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #111 on: April 17, 2014, 11:13:33 AM »
Lovely news but I just have a feeling Jack will escape.

He always does.



We have some smart people here, especially when they are targeting a man with no proof, they just going on senless report from a government with corruption everyday taking place.

Tell them Jack.

The COE will be in the Warner family forever.

FIFA, Concascaf, TTFA, Anand Ramlogan, bring all the fire and Jack will be here forever.

Tell Ramlogan his time coming very soon, remember, Jack have your secrets.

***message senbt from Tim Kee's office***

So you think it's acceptable for him to steal this from the Caribbean community? Your morals need a little work there Horner.

Offline dreamer

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #112 on: April 19, 2014, 10:03:06 AM »
I believe starboy havin' a tortured existence, plenty nightmares and sleepless nights.
Ah feel this fall is going to be hard, real hard. Anger and violence is a danger sign.
He might be running out of places to hide, wheel and deal especially when shockingly unable to leave little T&T in a long time. Daiz real fear.

Jackulito / Renraw in frightening action in 1 & 2 :

1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHGTI5jOnpM
2. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Klpn0Cyjhqw
and extra ...
3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j9t--d2I6Zg
Supportin' de Warriors right tru.

Offline Flex

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Re: Centre of Excellence
« Reply #113 on: June 08, 2015, 03:12:41 PM »
Trinidad academy sign of Warner's shady deals.
By Diego Urdaneta (AFP).


Port of Spain (AFP) - Trinidad and Tobago's Centre of Excellence, a football academy built with millions of dollars from FIFA, today hosts more weddings and conventions than matches, a symbol of the shady dealings of fallen executive Jack Warner.

The $22.5-million centre, which includes a stadium, a practice pitch, a swimming complex, a hotel and sprawling conference facilities, was supposed to train a new generation of footballers from around the Caribbean.

But somehow it ended up registered as belonging to Warner personally instead of the Confederation of North, Central America and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF), whose presidency the Trinidadian politician held at the time.

And despite the giant football, complete with CONCACAF logo, that sits atop a pedestal near the entrance, the pastel-colored complex today does lots of non-football business -- allegedly for the personal profit of Warner, who is also a former FIFA vice president.

"The Centre of Excellence has blossomed into a multi-purpose facility capable of hosting a range of functions and events catering to individuals and companies including locals and tourists with added amenities for business travelers," it boasts on its website.

"In fact, the complex has staged and hosted everything from large executive events such as seminars, symposiums and trade shows including weddings, graduations and parties."

The centre is named for former FIFA president Joao Havelange of Brazil, who agreed to help fund it before stepping down in 1998 after a 24-year reign that was, like that of his successor Sepp Blatter, overshadowed by scandal.

The complex boasts facilities such as a sprawling 5,000-capacity hall named for Blatter, who announced his resignation last week after US officials indicted Warner and eight other current or former FIFA officials in a sweeping investigation into corruption at world football's governing body.

A smaller 140-capacity conference room is named for Nelson Mandela, who helped campaign for FIFA to name South Africa the 2010 World Cup host nation in a vote that US investigators now suspect was swayed by a $10 million bribe paid to Warner.

- Ownership scandal -

The scandal over the Centre of Excellence erupted in 2012, 13 years after it was inaugurated and one year after Warner was forced to resign from all posts in international football amid allegations he tried to buy Caribbean officials' votes for a FIFA presidential election.

That year, CONCACAF lawyer John Collins caused an uproar at a meeting of the regional football body when he reported that the complex was registered to Warner.

"I am shell-shocked, dismayed and upset," then-CONCACAF president Jeffrey Webb of the Cayman Islands -- now also indicted in the US investigation -- said at the time.

FIFA has sought to wrest ownership of the complex from Warner, but he has insisted it belongs to the Caribbean Football Union, which he also used to run.

The centre did not reply to requests for an interview.

Security guards there now shoo away journalists, as they have been doing at all properties in Trinidad and Tobago linked to Warner, a politically powerful lawmaker, since his arrest on May 29 at the request of US authorities.

An AFP correspondent managed to get as far as the lobby, where a large display case boasts lines of trophies, many of them awarded to Warner, before a security guard asked him to leave.

- 'Badge of honor' -

Lasana Liburd, a Trinidadian sports journalist who has followed Warner's activities for two decades, said the centre is the "badge of honor" on the ex-football exec's scandal-stained reign.

Intended as the training ground of the Caribbean's football future, "it has for the most part been used for flea markets and political rallies and everything else," said Liburd, the editor of sports site wired868.com.

"I am pretty sure it is the main money spinner for Warner right now," he told AFP.

"It is a symbol of Caribbean football and Warner, in that something that could have been used for so much good and empowering the region in terms of sport instead was used for personal gain and profit."

The real measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

Offline dreamer

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Re: Centre of Excellence Thread.
« Reply #114 on: June 08, 2015, 03:51:17 PM »
Lasana, you continue to get the recognition you deserve for sterling investigative work that the now-curious foreign journalists find extremely valuable. Well done. Instead of being called "yuh f**ker" as shockingly happened here with blood curdling venom and additionally blacklisted by Renraw, you're now showing up all the cockroaches with their hidden agendas. Keep it up. Evil will meet it's match.
« Last Edit: June 08, 2015, 03:54:31 PM by dreamer »
Supportin' de Warriors right tru.

Offline Deeks

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Re: Centre of Excellence Thread.
« Reply #115 on: June 08, 2015, 05:25:39 PM »
Lasana, you continue to get the recognition you deserve for sterling investigative work that the now-curious foreign journalists find extremely valuable. Well done. Instead of being called "yuh f**ker" as shockingly happened here with blood curdling venom and additionally blacklisted by Renraw, you're now showing up all the cockroaches with their hidden agendas. Keep it up. Evil will meet it's match.

Dreamer, leh me tell one thing. Nobody on this forum, in CFU, in Concacaf and in FIFA  believed the "centre of excellence" was actually owned by Concacaf. We knew all along it was Warner's gift from Havelange.  Warner was totally committed to Havelange. Totally, Totally, totally!!!


Offline Errol

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Re: Centre of Excellence Thread.
« Reply #116 on: June 09, 2015, 06:25:19 AM »
This is a good opportunity for the TTFA should pounce on the Centre of Excellence.


Offline weary1969

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Re: Centre of Excellence Thread.
« Reply #117 on: June 09, 2015, 10:28:01 AM »
Lasana, you continue to get the recognition you deserve for sterling investigative work that the now-curious foreign journalists find extremely valuable. Well done. Instead of being called "yuh f**ker" as shockingly happened here with blood curdling venom and additionally blacklisted by Renraw, you're now showing up all the cockroaches with their hidden agendas. Keep it up. Evil will meet it's match.

Dreamer, leh me tell one thing. Nobody on this forum, in CFU, in Concacaf and in FIFA  believed the "centre of excellence" was actually owned by Concacaf. We knew all along it was Warner's gift from Havelange.  Warner was totally committed to Havelange. Totally, Totally, totally!!!



It was probaly owned by Concacaf and not CONCACAF. Concaf is a dummy company owned by Jack.
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Offline Bakes

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Re: Centre of Excellence Thread.
« Reply #118 on: June 09, 2015, 11:20:20 AM »
This is a good opportunity for the TTFA should pounce on the Centre of Excellence.



How? 

Try thinking first this time.

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Mussenden manifesto woos Caribbean with corruption cash, pro-league and Trinidad training centre
By Paul Nicholson (insideworldfootball.com)


Larry Mussenden, one of the last two standing candidates in the election to the presidency of CONCACAF, has launched his election manifesto promising to chase down the $190 million of corruption cash collected by the US justice department, to push for a Caribbean professional league and to get back the Trinidad training centre from Jack Warner,

Under the banner “It’s out time to move forward together’, Mussenden covers a lot of ground in a manifesto in which he says he “will stand for Governance, Development and Achievement. I will be unrelenting in my promotion of these most important principles.”

Mussenden is head of the Bermuda Football Association and chairman of the FIFA and CONCACAF appeal committee. In public life he has been a government senator, Attorney-General and Minister of Justice as well as having his own private legal practice. In March he was appointed Bermuda’s Director of Public Prosecutions.

One of his first acts if elected president would be to get ensure CONCACAF gets its fair share of the $190 million+ collected by the US Department of Justice which he says should be shared as follows: 30% to CONCACAF; 20% to the Unions, based on demonstrated need; and 50% be divided equally amongst CONCACAF’s Member Associations.

Mussenden doesn’t put a figure on how much can be collected or a timescale, but he does recognise in his manifesto a need to reinstate CONCACAF programmes which have been shut down or reduced under the current operational procedure which, at peak, has seen outside US legal and management consultants take up to $1.4 million a month out of the confederation’s budget – revenue projections for the past year are just $25 million. Mussenden says that the CONCACAF reserve fund would need to be activated.

He says he would also “commence litigation to recover the Centre of Excellence in Trinidad and Tobago”.

The training centre has often been the elephant in the room in Caribbean circles with Warner currently its registered owner, his argument being that it was gifted to him as an individual. This has been disputed and various attempts have been made to wrestle the training centre back by negotiation, all to no avail.

Mussenden says he would go straight to law to go win back the centre and would “use the facility as follows: As a prime leased facility in order to obtain revenue for CONCACAF; as headquarters for the Trinidad and Tobago Football Association; as a regional training centre for use by CONCACAF Member Associations with guaranteed annual free/discounted usage per country; for regional tournaments.”

Like all candidates in this election, and in the election for FIFA president previously, Mussenden champions the need for a professional league in the Caribbean, saying that he would work with the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) leadership to develop a sustainable competition for the region.

It is the Caribbean, with its majority vote, who will likely decide the outcome of the presidency race between Mussenden and Canada’s Victor Montagliani, the preferred candidate of the North American associations and particularly the US.

The favourite for the election was CFU president Gordon Derrick who was barred from running last week for failing an integrity check carried out by CONCACAF’s hired-in US law firm Sidley Austin and referred to FIFA. The circumstances around this integrity check are both unclear and uncomfortable and on the face of the evidence seen so far look suspiciously like politicking in the US interest.

Mussenden, could be the big beneficiary of this when it comes to the May 12 election, as the Caribbean vote that was solidly behind Derrick could switch to supporting him. His manifesto certainly makes strong overtures to the Caribbean membership and promises to include the CFU in his decision making.

Within the Caribbean, Mussenden is generally seen as being slightly outside the regional mainstream, having never held major CFU position and having been slightly aloof from their activities, presumably due to his other commitments. Indeed, paperwork has reportedly been done that would see the Bermuda FA shift its sub-regional political affiliation to the North American block, though Bermuda would still play in Caribbean competitions.

However, now Mussenden is clearly lobbying hard for Caribbean favour and looks like the candidate most likely to win their support with a set of promises that also include the reinstatement of a number of development programmes that would have direct impact on the CFU members including; reinstatement of the U15 Boys and Girls development tournaments, development of pitch infrastructure in each country, and reinvogorated referee and coach development programmes.

The Caribbean may have had their man – Gordon Derrick – removed from the game, but they may not be out of the CONCACAF power play completely if Mussenden can follow through on his pledges.
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