US attorney general Loretta Lynch warned on Monday that the number of people indicted in a wide-ranging racketeering case should rise from the current tally of 14.
Lynch held a joint news conference with her counterpart in Switzerland, Michael Lauber, to give an update on their separate investigations into alleged corruption in soccer.
121 Suspicious acts of possible money laundering being examined by Swiss federal prosecutors. That number has grown from 53 in June.
$600,000 The total amount Fifa charged its then vice president Jack Warner for World Cup television rights in the Caribbean for the 2010 and 2014 tournaments. Warner sublicensed the rights to a family company and sold them on for up to $20 million. The Fifa deal from 2005 was signed by President Sepp Blatter, and Warner has claimed Blatter knowingly traded cheap TV rights for political support.