French police took four Marseille officials into custody on Tuesday amid a probe into the club’s transfer dealings, while nine others were arrested as part of an investigation into alleged match fixing on a day of scandal for French football, reports FRANCE 24.
Vincent Labrune, president of Olympique de Marseille since 2008, was taken in for questioning alongside former club presidents Jean-Claude Dassier and Pape Diouf as well as Marseille director general Philippe Perez, sources close to the case told news agencies.
Investigators are trying to find out whether the club leaders took illicit commissions when France striker André-Pierre Gignac signed for Marseille from Toulouse for a reported 16 million euros ($20 million). Dassier was the club’s president at the time, with Labrune in charge of all financial operations.
Gignac has scored 10 goals for the club in 13 games this season, helping to propel Marseille to the top of Ligue 1.
In a statement on its website, Olympique de Marseille confirmed Labrune and Perez were being questioned and said "the club and its management has not ceased to cooperate with the courts and to help establish the truth" in the two-year-old investigation.
In a separate investigation, president of Ligue 1 club Caen, Jean-Francois Fortin, was among nine arrested Tuesday over suspicions of match-fixing during a game with Nimes while playing in the second division last season.
Nimes president Jean-Marc Conrad was also arrested, a police source confirmed to Reuters.
The game in question, on May 13 this year, ended in a 1-1 draw – a result that meant Nîmes avoided relegation from Ligue 2, while simultaneously allowing Caen to virtually secure their promotion into the top flight.
Le Parisien newspaper reported that police were also investigating several other games played by Nîmes last season for evidence of match fixing.
The two clubs could face expulsion from their respective divisions should the match-fixing allegations be proven, the French League (LFP) president Frederic Thiriez warned at a press conference Tuesday.
“If corruption, match fixing were to be proven, the League would impose the necessary sanctions with the greatest severity and I remind you that it could go as far as the exclusion from the league,” he said.