Swiss Attorney General Michael Lauber faces impeachment proceedings over his handling of a FIFA corruption probe. This is a first in the history of the federal public prosecutor’s office.
Parliament’s judicial committee on Wednesday held a two-hour hearing with the attorney general to assess whether there are reasonable grounds to suspect he had breached his official duties either deliberately or through gross negligence.
The committee’s head, Andrea Caroni, announced the decision late Wednesday, which was taken with 13 votes in favour and four against. The committee could file a motion to remove Lauber from office, which parliament would vote on in September at the earliest.
Lauber said Wednesday’s meeting with the judicial committee had “gone well.”
The attorney general has come under scrutiny over how his office handled the FIFA corruption investigation and for holding undocumented meetings with FIFA President Gianni Infantino.
As punishment, an independent oversight authority, AB-BAExternal link, cut Lauber’s nearly CHF300,000 ($309,000) salary by 8% for one year.
Lauber has made an appeal to the Federal Administrative Court. He alleges that the supervisory authority committed numerous procedural errors, exceeded its competence and was biased.
Last September, parliament re-elected Lauber for a third term despite months of controversy over his handling of the FIFA case.
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Swiss attorney faces possible impeachment over FIFA probe
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Michael Lauber could become the first high-ranking national official to be impeached over his handling of a FIFA corruption probe.
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Switzerland’s attorney general is facing new calls to resign over accusations that his office botched up a high-profile international football trial.
Swiss attorney general has pay cut for breach of duty
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Swiss watchdog accuses Attorney general Michael Lauber of disloyalty and lying in connection with an international football corruption investigation.
Controversial Swiss attorney general wins re-election
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Parliament has re-elected the attorney general, Michael Lauber, despite a controversy over his handling of a international corruption probe.
Federal court blocks Lauber’s attempt to rejoin FIFA case
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Switzerland’s top court has upheld a previous ruling that Lauber’s closed-door meetings with FIFA’s head had raised the appearance of bias.
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