From Deseret News archives:
Businessman says he gave bid leaders cash
Oly travel firm owner says he gave $130,000
"I said, 'Absolutely. Just give me time to assemble the cash,' " Sead Dizdarevic, owner of Jet Set Sports, said, describing envelopes of money totaling $130,000 that were delivered to Welch and Johnson at airports and hotels.
The four payments, made in the year before the International Olympic Committee's June 1995 decision to give Salt Lake City the Games, weren't the only transactions between Dizdarevic and the bid leaders.
Two checks that added up to $45,000 went from the bid committee to a Dizdarevic company called OL-CAL, set up in Canada to handle business from the 1988 Winter Games in Calgary. Dizdarevic said he wasn't owed any money by the bid.
So was he surprised when Welch turned up with one of the checks at a hotel during the 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer, Norway?
"In a way, maybe yes, maybe no," he told the jury.
Dizdarevic said he assumed the money was meant as a "thank-you" for hospitality services he'd provided at no or reduced charges to the bid committee. Since the 1984 Winter Games in his native Yugoslavia, he has made his living selling travel packages to the Olympics.
Jet Set Sports, now based in New Jersey, was an official sponsor of the 2002 Games. It cost companies sending customers and employees to the Games between $800,000 and $2 million for hotel rooms, transportation, meals and Olympic tickets, Dizdarevic said.
He was given immunity by the government for his testimony against Welch and Johnson, who are charged with fraud, conspiracy and racketeering in connection with the more than $1 million in cash and gifts given to influence IOC members.
The government charged that Welch and Johnson conspired to solicit the payments from Dizdarevic in cash so the transaction would not appear on the bid committee's books and "could be diverted by the defendants for their own personal purposes."
During Tuesday's testimony, it was not made clear what those purposes were, although the prosecution seemed to be suggesting that the payment to OL-CAL was a way of laundering money later returned as cash.
Welch's attorney, Bill Taylor, dismissed that idea to reporters outside the courtroom. He said cash was necessary to people traveling as much as Welch and Johnson did during the bid.
"This is a cash-intensive business and operation," Taylor said. "They had to carry cash. It's not sinister. It's not suspicious. It's just the way you have to operate (especially in Africa and Eastern Europe). It's a different world."













