The effort to round up all of the people indicted by the United States Justice Department proceeded Wednesday, a sprawling, international operation that is playing out in several soccer-mad countries. When will the accused appear in court in Brooklyn? Maybe not anytime soon.

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■ The contours of the case became clearer when the indictment was unsealed Wednesday morning. Of the 12 illegal schemes described in the indictment, nine were sports marketing deals involving soccer tournaments.

■ UEFA, soccer’s governing body in Europe, on Wednesday called for FIFA to postpone its presidential election, scheduled for Friday. “UEFA believes that the FIFA congress should be postponed and that the election for the president should take place within six months,” the organization said in a statement.

■ Jack Warner, a former FIFA vice president who figures prominently in the United States prosecutors’ case, turned himself in to law enforcement officials in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad and Tobago. The country set his bail at $2.5 million. His sons, Daryan and Daryll Warner, pleaded guilty in 2013.