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Mexican Football Federation has prepared $6 million to buy a pre World Cup friendly match.
The Mexican Football Federation had $6 million ready to buy a pre-World Cup friendly match.
The money was in the account, but the contract was never signed.
Because the Argentine Football Association made a demand: split the money into three payments, deposited into three completely different bank accounts.
The Mexicans aren't exactly saints in international football, but even they smelled something fishy. They walked away from the table.
The $6 million deal fell through, but it tore open a fatal crack. The FBI's Miami office slipped in through that crack and uncovered a $260 million money pool at the Argentine Football Association (AFA).
The ones eyeing this fat prize were the FBI and federal prosecutors.
The target was a shell company called TourProdEnter LLC, registered in Aventura, Florida. It was founded in August 2021, and just four months later, it became the AFA's "exclusive overseas commercial agent."
The national team's entire commercial lifeline was handed over to this American company.
The bank statements dug up by La Nación were shocking. $260 million in AFA revenue passed through four US banks: $146 million at Bank of America, $72.4 million at Synovus Bank, $41.8 million at Citibank, and $270,000 at JPMorgan Chase.
The $60 million sponsorship from Adidas and the $40 million from Warner all leaked into this funnel.
The flaw was hidden in the timeline.
December 9, 2021. Nearly a year before the Qatar World Cup kicked off. The Argentine squad hadn't even started preparations, yet the AFA's top brass had already signed an exclusive agency deal with TourProdEnter.
The terms were predatory: the company took a fixed 30% commission on all international commercial revenue and another 10% on overseas expenses.
Even top football stars' agents usually only take a 10% commission. A shell company without a sports agency license was taking a full 30%.
Locking in the contract before the World Cup even started. Was it a preemptive move betting on a championship win, or a fear of delays? AFA President Tapia knows the answer.
Even more absurd were the details revealed by investigative journalist Román Molina: FIFA deposited Argentina's post-World Cup prize money directly into TourProdEnter's account. Not into the AFA's official accounts.
Once the money was extracted, it had to be laundered.
TourProdEnter transferred about $57 million to a bunch of companies and individuals. La Nación's investigative reporters traced the list of recipients and found that some of them were receiving Argentine social welfare benefits, living in slums in Buenos Aires or Bariloche.
Using poor people on welfare as front men to hide the real beneficiaries. It's the oldest trick in the money laundering book, but also the most effective.
Facing the investigation, TourProdEnter's actual controller, Javier Faroni, started crying foul. This guy is an Argentine theater producer.
In an interview with Perfil, he insisted: "This is a legal commercial activity. There are no charges, no investigations."
But then, in a report by Noticias Argentinas, the producer changed his tune and shifted the blame: "The company acted entirely on the instructions of AFA President Tapia and Toviggino."
From directing stage plays to running accounts for the AFA—Netflix wouldn't dare film such a leap.
Once the money was laundered, someone had to spend it.
Clarín reported that TourProdEnter bought a private jet. Exclusively for AFA President Tapia's use.
Federal prosecutors in Miami have started questioning witnesses, with the investigation targeting money laundering, bank fraud, and tax evasion. Tapia is also being watched by tax authorities back in Argentina.
The FBI hasn't filed formal charges yet, and the AFA is playing dead in response to media email inquiries.
But Tapia's private jet—who knows how many more takeoffs and landings it has left.