T&T Football Association (TTFA) president, Raymond Tim Kee is now corroborating at least part of the claims by former Fifa vice-president, Caribbean Football union president and TTFF adviser Jack Warner that he (Warner) funded the People's Partnership 2010 general election campaign.
There is currently a war of words between Warner and the People's Partnership over his claims that he funded the party's election campaign with money sourced through his Fifa dealings.
While Warner is stickling to those claims and has allegedly provided information to a group of attorneys to prove this, the UNC continues to deny the claim.
But speaking exclusively to the T&T Guardian yesterday, Tim Kee said he knew for a fact that former Warner used his own money to fund at least one UNC event which he (Tim Kee) had knowledge of.
Tim Kee was referring to an invoice he allegedly received from a popular hotel and conference centre in Port-of-Spain which had billed the TTFA for a "UNC Banquet Dinner."
Although initially admitting to not really wanting to let the "cat-out-of-the-bag," Tim Kee said, "I don't want to make it an issue yet. I have to find the document first."
He added, "I know of this because with the invoice were some notes which indicated the items."
Tim Kee also assured that he knew for a fact that Warner took money from the TTFF which went straight to the UNC.
"The man took our money and gave it to politics," he said.
Tim Kee said Warner was committed to the UNC cause in 2010.
"Knowing Mr Warner as I do, he does not give up until he comes to the end of his effort and all strategies, for which he is well known, were applied in that effort to put the UNC party into power," he said, saying he was sure Warner used the monies he would have acquired from Fifa to spend in the 2010 election.
"I would think it is public knowledge when he became chairman, he had a goal and that goal was to take the UNC party into government," he said.
Similar football strategy
Tim Kee explained that Warner had a similar behaviour and strategy in football and in the earlier years mortgaged his house in a bid to raise money for football and to take care of some other expenses in relation to the sport.
"That was the sort of passion he (Warner) had demonstrated over the years for local football. What happens subsequent to those years I am not in a position to converse on and comment," he said.
During an address to the nation on Wednesday night, Warner, a former national security minister and now political leader of the Independent Liberal Party, reiterated that there was a link between Fifa's millions and the PP's 2010 campaign.
He disclosed that he had compiled a series of cheques and supporting documents that would corroborate his financial support to the PP's successful general campaign in 2010. The documents, Warner said, were already in the hands of attorneys.
Warner is currently out on $2.5 million bail after he appeared in the Port-of-Spain Magistrates Court on charges of corruption and racketeering conspiracy in relation to his dealings with Fifa, stemming out of an indictment by the US government, which is now seeking to extradite him to the US to face those charges.