Michel Platini, the former UEFA president twice acquitted in Swiss courts, filed a criminal complaint in Paris on Monday 8 June against FIFA president Gianni Infantino and five others, including former Swiss attorney-general Michael Lauber and former FIFA legal director Marco Villiger 1. The charges are conspiracy to make a false accusation and influence-peddling; Platini alleges the scheme blocked his run for the FIFA presidency in 2015. He filed a parallel civil damages suit against FIFA.
Platini's 2015 ban arose from a 2m Swiss-franc payment FIFA characterised as improper. His later acquittal in Switzerland left open the question of who engineered the original case, and refiling in France targets that chain of conduct rather than the payment itself. The venue choice matters: a French criminal court is harder for FIFA to treat as resolved than the closed Swiss proceedings, and it keeps the matter live after the Swiss file shut.
Governance pressure now reaches Infantino from two directions at once. The Norwegian Football Federation publicly backed FairSquare's Article 15 ethics complaint against him on 2 June, with NFF president Lise Klaveness writing "we are sending this letter alone" as a deliberately unilateral signal . Platini's filing is a separate matter in a separate jurisdiction, but it lands in the same fortnight, days before Infantino opens the largest World Cup ever staged.
