AFP – Six men linked to Juventus and France midfielder Paul Pogba face trial from tomorrow, accused of blackmail, attempted extortion of millions of euros and holding the player at gunpoint.
The case at the Paris criminal court has shocked the French football world – all the more so because the perpetrators include three childhood friends and Pogba’s own brother Mathias.
The development comes as Pogba battles professional woes, as Juventus this month cancelled his contract following his suspension until March 2025 for doping.
In total, the group are accused of attempting to squeeze EUR13 million (USD13.5 million) out of the player.
Mathias was himself the one to go public in the case, publishing a video on social networks in August 2022 in French, Italian, English and Spanish.
He promised revelations about his younger brother that were “likely to be explosive” while remaining vague about the details.
In a subsequent clip, Mathias accused his younger brother of casting an evil spell on his France teammate Kylian Mbappe.
Paul Pogba’s lawyers and his agent Rafaela Pimenta said in a statement later in August 2022 that the videos “came on top of threats and attempts at extortion as part of a criminal gang” against their client.
He had already filed criminal complaints in Italy and France in July that year.
Pogba told French investigators that he had in March 2022 been “tricked by childhood friends” from the neighbourhood in Roissy-en-Brie outside Paris where he and Mathias grew up.
He accused them of snatching him before he was held at gunpoint by two hooded men with assault rifles, demanding EUR13 million for “services rendered” – blaming the footballer for failing to help them financially since his professional success.
Pogba said at the time that he had paid them only EUR100,000.
The footballer said he had also been pressured at the France national team’s training centre in Clairefontaine, at one of his homes in Manchester, and at Juventus’ training ground.
Pogba added that he had also paid a bill of more than EUR57,000 that the same friends had racked up at the Adidas store on Paris’ glitzy Champs-Elysees avenue.