World Cup warriors to sue Jack Warner
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad (CMC) — Members of Trinidad and Tobago’s 2006 World Cup squad are planning to sue national security minister Jack Warner over his role as former special adviser and controller of the federation’s finances.
The 13 Soca Warriors have retained a Queen’s Counsel in England who is studying their current legal case against the Trinidad and Tobago Football Federation.
The players have already started legal proceedings aimed at liquidating the federation over its refusal to pay millions owed to them from proceeds associated with the 2006 World Cup campaign.
“We have engaged a QC (Queen’s Counsel) here in England who is studying every part of the case, and if I was the national security minister I would be concerned,” Kelvin Jack, a 2006 Soca Warriors goalkeeper, told the Express.
“The QC and his assistants are looking at the role Jack (Warner) played. We have seen some transactions that directly involve Jack Warner, and it is something we are investigating. We are just making sure that everything is airtight.”
The players are owed nearly TT$12 million after the UK-based Sports Dispute Resolution Panel (SPDR) and later the Trinidad and Tobago High Court ruled in their favour.
Last month the warriors wrote to FIFA President Sepp Blatter, CONCACAF President Jeffrey Webb and TTFF President Raymond Tim Kee informing them of their intention to liquidate the assets of the TTFA.
“What they have done is wrong. It’s 100 per cent wrong,” declared Jack.
“This is not a joke, this is not a bluff. They have no interest in paying us, but they can pay (expensive) QCs.”