Defiant Warner vows not to give up extradition fight
PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, (CMC) – A defiant Austin ‘Jack’ Warner said Thursday he would continue to fight his extradition to the United States to answer to corruption charges.
The Privy Council, Trinidad and Tobago’s highest court of appeal, dismissed Warner’s lawyers’ contention that the extradition proceedings in the magistrate’s court in the Caribbean country were unlawful.
READ: Warner loses extradition challenge at Privy Council
“I continue to have confidence in my team led by Fyard Hosein, senior counsel, and I have advised them to continue to press my case on the three remaining stages of these proceedings,” Warner said in a post on his Facebook page on Thursday morning, following the Privy Council ruling.
“I have lived in this country for nearly eighty years, and I am confident that I will continue to receive the love, affection, and respect that people from all walks of life have always extended to me. I am certain I will prevail in the end,” he added.
Warner, who stated that he had conferred with his lawyers before issuing the statement, also suggested that the Trinidad and Tobago courts should not have been involved in this matter.
He had challenged the authority to proceed granted by the attorney general in September 2014, which had given the court the authority to begin extradition proceedings.
“I note that several European countries, including France and Switzerland, several Latin American countries, including Brazil, and several African and Middle Eastern countries have refused to extradite their citizens. Trinidad and Tobago is, therefore, an outlier,” Warner said.
“I have no banking account nor property in the United States. I have not transacted any business there. It is unfathomable how a New York District Attorney could commence a prosecution against me based solely on the fact that monies payable to me passed through the American banking system.
“Furthermore, it is incredulous that allegations of misconduct arising out of a FIFA meeting held in Trinidad could be prosecuted in the United States, whereas, in Trinidad itself, it does not constitute criminal activity,” he added.
Warner, who also served as CONCACAF president, is one of 14 people charged in connection with what US prosecutors said was a 24-year scheme that was designed to “enrich themselves through the corruption of international soccer”.
The US Department of Justice claims that from as far back as 1990, Warner leveraged his influence and exploited his official positions for personal gain.
He is accused of receiving $5 million in bribes to vote for Russia to host the 2018 World Cup.