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2026 FIFA World Cup
6JUL

Platini sues FIFA's Infantino in Paris

3 min read
09:51UTC

Michel Platini filed a Paris criminal complaint against Gianni Infantino and five others on 8 June, 72 hours before the World Cup opens.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Infantino opens his biggest tournament defending his record in two jurisdictions at once.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Michel Platini was one of the greatest French footballers of his generation, who later became president of UEFA (the body that runs European football) from 2007 to 2016. He was widely expected to succeed Sepp Blatter as FIFA's president in 2015 but was banned from football for four years over a payment he received from FIFA, effectively ending his presidential ambitions. Swiss courts eventually cleared him of wrongdoing twice, but by then the window for the FIFA presidency had closed. On 8 June 2026, Platini filed a criminal complaint in Paris against FIFA president Gianni Infantino and five other individuals. He alleges that a group that included Infantino and Michael Lauber, who was Switzerland's top prosecutor at the time, worked together to concoct false accusations against him in order to stop him from running for FIFA's top job. He is also suing FIFA for financial damages. The complaint landed in Paris days before Infantino was set to open the 2026 World Cup.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The complaint rests on a specific procedural allegation: that Lauber as Swiss attorney-general held undisclosed meetings with Infantino while simultaneously overseeing criminal proceedings that targeted Platini and Blatter.

Lauber resigned from his post in 2020 after a Swiss parliamentary investigation found he had misled the Federal Criminal Court about those meetings. The three undisclosed meetings are the factual foundation Platini is using to argue the prosecutorial process was weaponised against him.

Platini is filing in France rather than Switzerland because, as a French national, he can bring a complaint before French investigative magistrates (juges d'instruction) for acts affecting his interests, even if those acts occurred partly in Switzerland.

The French inquisitorial system, unlike the common-law adversarial model, allows a magistrate to open an independent investigation on a complainant's application, giving Platini's lawyers a second jurisdictional avenue that Swiss acquittals do not close.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If a French examining magistrate opens a formal investigation, Infantino could be summoned for questioning during or immediately after the tournament, creating a governance distraction at FIFA's most commercially sensitive moment.

  • Precedent

    Platini's use of the French partie civile mechanism to pursue FIFA governance claims through a national criminal court sets a template: any national of an EU member state who suffered from alleged FIFA misconduct can potentially open parallel proceedings in their home jurisdiction.

First Reported In

Update #17 · Host turns back a World Cup referee

ESPN· 9 Jun 2026
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