Three more Premier League clubs may face raids in bungs probe

13 April 2012

More Premier League clubs are in line for a visit from the City of London Police after the arrests of Birmingham co-owner David Sullivan and managing director Karren Brady signalled a twist in the football corruption probe.

Previous raids at Birmingham, Portsmouth, Newcastle and Rangers were linked to transfers of players which fell within the two-year period investigated by Quest for the Premier League, and which involved Scottish agent Willie McKay.

Questioned: David Sullivan and Karren Brady

Last week's developments confirm the investigation has much wider scope and suggest police are following up leads generated by two ongoing inquiries in France.

In the anonymous letter which sparked one of those probes, three more Premier League clubs, yet to be raided, were named as being involved in suspect deals.

Birmingham owner Sullivan said he and Brady were innocent of any wrongdoing and had been questioned merely about the tax arrangements of two players.

One of those is understood to be Senegal international Ferdinand Coly, who joined Birmingham on loan from Lens in January 2003.

In the same anonymous letter sent to French police and football authorities by an agent in early 2004, Coly is just one of a host of past and present Premier League players alleged to have received, or been promised, tax-free payments.

The letter led to the ongoing Marseille-based investigation into Richard Bettoni, an unlicensed agent whose clients include Manchester United striker Louis Saha and France defender Jean-Alain Boumsong.

The transfer of Boumsong from Rangers to Newcastle was among the 17 deals Quest chief Lord Stevens refused to sign off and, as the letter claimed, involved McKay.

The other player linked to last week's arrests is understood to be another Senegal midfielder, Aliou Cisse, whose £300,000 move to Portsmouth in August 2004 was also in the Quest 17.

Brady and Sullivan are believed to have been questioned also about the period after Cisse's initial move to England, when he signed for Birmingham from Montpellier for £1.5million in July 2002.

On the instruction of judges, French police visited the homes and offices of nine agents in 2005, including McKay's then home in Monaco.

McKay was not there and says he later brought relevant documents to Paris personally and answered all the judges' questions to their satisfaction.

The agent, who has not been charged in either of the French probes, last night declined to comment, but has previously denied any wrongdoing and described the focus on his deals as 'a witch-hunt' sparked by the jealousy of rival agents.

Last year, Quest published a statement saying that there was no evidence of irregular payments in the deals involving McKay which fell within its two-year remit, and thanked him for his co-operation.

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