Football Leaks investigative project continues.
This is a cross-border investigation into how the secret deals of club officials, leading associations, agents, investors and players have corrupted the most popular sport in the world.
Continues revelations are based on research into more then 70 million documents totalling 3.4 terabytes of data. The data extends to the year 2018.
Recent work was undertaken by the network European Investigative Collaborations (EIC) and its partners, which has brought together 15 media and almost 80 journalists from 13 countries, publishing in 11 languages across Europe.
Follow #FootballLeaks @EICnetwork to keep up with the stories over the next days and check out here our past reporting during the first Football Leaks investigation.
We will also upload all of our stories below, published in different languages by different media organizations.
Initiators
DER SPIEGEL (Rafael Buschmann)
Participants
Reporting
Rafael Buschmann, Jürgen Dahlkamp, Christoph Winterbach, Andreas Meyhoff, Robin Wille, Nicola Naber, Jörg Schmitt, Alfred Weinzierl, Michael Wulzinger, Gunther Latsch (Der Spiegel); Michaël Hajdenberg, Michel Henry, Yann Philippin, Antton Rouget (Mediapart); Vittorio Malagutti, Stefano Vergine (L’Espresso); Hanneke Chin-A-Fo, Hugo Logtenberg, Fabian van der Poll, Esther Rosenberg, Jeroen Wester (NRC); Micael Pereira, Miguel Prado (Expresso); Michael Bird, Zeynep Sentek, Craig Shaw, Catalin Prisacariu, Costin Stucan (RCIJ/TBS); Alain Lallemand, Joel Matriche, Stephane Vande Velde (Le Soir); Jeppe Laursen Brock, Lars Halskov, Søren Lissner (Politiken); Blaž Zgaga (Nacional); Maxie Eckert, Mark Eeckhaut, Nico Tanghe, Nikolas Vanhecke (De Standaard); Anders K. Christiansen (VG); Martin Boudot, Antoine Cadaux (Premieres Lignes); Katrin Kampling, Sven Lohmann, Hendrik Maaßen, Nino Seidel, Han Park, Birgit Wärnke (NDR); Oliver Zihlmann, Mario Staeuble, Christian Brönnimann, Alexandre Haederli (Tamedia) and journalists at Reuters.
Research was also contributed by journalism students of the Centre de Formation des Journalistes (CFJ) under the mentoring of Mediapart: Emilie Duhamel, Arthur Eryeh-Fort, Marion Huysman, Syrielle Mejias, Pauline Pauquet, Alicia Roux and Laurène Trillard; Atilla Türker contributed to the research on Turkey under the mentoring of The Black Sea; Goran Kapor and Mihailo Jovović from Vijesti contributed to research in Montenegro, under the mentoring of Nacional.
Technology, Information Design and Social Media editors
Stephan Heffner (Der Spiegel); Alex Morega, Gabriel Vijiala, Mircea Toader, Mugur Rus, Nisha Vasudevan (RCIJ/TBS); Donatien Huet, Ludyvine Laforme (Mediapart); Jorg Leijten (NRC); Jari Bakken, Øystein Reistadbakk, Eivind Haugen (VG); Matthieu Lère (Premieres Lignes); Sylvie Van Ginneken (De Standaard)
Project Guide
Stefan Candea, (RCIJ/TBS)
European Investigative Collaborations by eic.network is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License if not otherwise stated.