Two men are due to appear in court accused over an incident in which a fan walked into the England dressing room after the World Cup match against Algeria.
Pavlos Joseph, 32, from Crystal Palace, south-east London, will appear at a special World Cup Court in Cape Town charged with trespassing.
Sunday Mirror journalist Simon Wright, 44, will appear at the same court in a linked but separate hearing, charged with defeating the ends of justice and flouting the Immigration Act.
Joseph gave an interview to the newspaper in which he said he was looking for the toilet at Green Point stadium after the match when a security guard sent him in the direction of the players' tunnel.
He claimed he took a wrong turn and found himself in the changing room where he berated the players for their poor performance. He said he told David Beckham: "David, we've spent a lot of money getting here. This is a disgrace. What are you going to do about it?"
He was arrested at the Bay Hotel in Camps Bay on Sunday June 20, the day his interview was published. He appeared in court the same day where he was banned from attending any more World Cup matches, his passport was seized and he was released on 500 rand (£44) bail.
Wright was detained on Monday night at Cape Town international airport. He appeared in court two and a half hours later where he was granted 3,000 rand (£260) bail and his passport was confiscated. The National Commissioner of Police, General Bheki Cele, said Wright helped to orchestrate the incident - a claim denied by the Sunday Mirror.
Meanwhile, the officials who failed to award Frank Lampard a goal in England's crunch match against Germany were given the boot.
Uruguayan referee Jorge Larrionda and assistants Mauricio Espinosa and Pablo Fandino are not being retained by Fifa for the quarter-final stages and beyond.
Fifa president Sepp Blatter was forced to apologise to the Football Association following the officials' inexplicable failure to spot that Lampard's first-half shot had bounced two feet over the line when it crashed down off the crossbar. England lost 4-1 and were knocked out of the tournament.





