 Although FIFA Ethics judge  Hans-Joachim Eckert’s findings named both former FIFA vice-president  Jack Warner and former Asian confederation president Mohammed Bin Hammam  as having contravened rules regarding payments, FIFA president Sepp  Blatter has stated that the investigation into 2018 and 2022 World Cup  bidding is closed.
Although FIFA Ethics judge  Hans-Joachim Eckert’s findings named both former FIFA vice-president  Jack Warner and former Asian confederation president Mohammed Bin Hammam  as having contravened rules regarding payments, FIFA president Sepp  Blatter has stated that the investigation into 2018 and 2022 World Cup  bidding is closed.
In his findings released last week,  Eckert, tasked with reporting on the investigation into those bidding  processes conducted by chairman of the investigatory chamber of the FIFA  Ethics Committee, Michael Garcia, named Warner and Bin Hammam as having  contravened rules regarding payments, according to newpaper reports out  of the UK.
Warner, a former UNC chairman and  minster in various portfolios in the Trinidad and Tobago Government,  resigned from FIFA in 2011, while Qatar’s Bin Hammam was banned for life  by FIFA. Both are former FIFA ethics committee members.
But FIFA has lodged a criminal  complaint with the Swiss attorney general over “suspected unlawful  activity” of unnamed individuals connected with the bidding contests  despite Blatter’s statement that the investigation is concluded.
The report, handed over to the  Swiss prosecutors by Eckert as part of his findings into the Garcia  investigation, will not be published, Blatter had said, citing the  publication would breach FIFA and state laws.
“The matter will now also be looked  at by an independent, state body, which shows that FIFA is not opposed  to transparency,” Blatter was reported to have said.
A FIFA statement said: “The subject  of the criminal complaint is the possible misconduct of individual  persons in connection with the awarding of the hosting rights of the  2018 and 2022 World Cups investigated by Michael Garcia.
“In particular there seem to be  grounds for suspicion that, in isolated cases, international transfers  of assets with connections to Switzerland took place, which merit  examination by the criminal prosecution authorities.” 
The identities of the individuals  who have been reported to the attorney general have not been disclosed,  according to the UK media report.
 	