World Soccer Hero, Loretta Lynch, is going to enter the lion's den to update the world on her case against FIFA corruption. The U.S. Attorney General will host a press conference on September 14, in Zurich; at the same hotel that housed officials she helped arrest back in May.

At the conference, Lynch will be joined by her Swiss counterpart, Michael Lauber, who has been running a separate investigation into FIFA corruption. While Lynch's case involves money laundering and corruption in relation to the 2010 World Cup bidding process and next year's Copa Centenario. In her indictment released in May, she accused 14 officials of bribery, money laundering, fraud and racketeering. In total, 47 charges were brought against FIFA and sports marketing officials. Seven of them were arrested in the very hotel she'll be staying in by Swiss officials.

It was those arrests that kicked off their own investigation after FIFA Headquarters in Zurich and CONCACAF Headquarters in Miami were raided as part of that investigation. The Swiss are investigating the World Cup bidding processes for 2018 in Russia and 2022. Both bids have been surrounded in bribery, corruption and vote swapping allegations since the tournaments were awarded.

Since the arrests were made, little information has come from either camp as to the status of their investigations and whether further arrests may be made. Other governments have jumped on the ship as Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, Trinidad & Tobago and Paraguay have all started their own investigations.

Lynch and Lauber will be part of a conference in Zurich titled International Association of Prosecutors. There top officials from around the world will meet up to discuss ways to fight crime, especially across borders that require cooperation between governments. The Swiss and U.S. investigations into FIFA are a prime example of such cooperation.

Perhaps the best part about Lynch's press conference will be the response of current president Sepp Blatter who has had nothing nice to say about Lynch or her investigation into his organization. Repeatedly he has called out the U.S. for wrongfully investigating FIFA, a parroting of Russian president Vladimir Putin. Of course he has also said that he welcomes the investigations and once even said they were begun at the behest of FIFA in an effort to clean up the organization.

As Blatter's presidency winds down towards its end in February of 2016, we can all hope that Lynch and/or Lauber will have information to give the public hope that he won't retain his freedom nearly that long. Perhaps he can join six of his comrades in a Swiss prison awaiting extradition to the United States. That'd cement her place as a World Hero.