An ICC official had “warned” BCCI chief N. Srinivasan's son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan to be “careful” about his association with bookies weeks before he was arrested in connection with the Indian Premier League (IPL) betting scandal, police said on Friday.
An offcial of the anti-corruption unit of the highest governing body of international cricket had verbally asked Mr. Meiyappan to steer clear of the bookies after his activities came to their notice, a top crime branch officer involved in the investigation said.
“Be careful, I have been warned,” Mr. Meiyappan had told actor Vindoo Randhawa who is also under arrest in the case.
This is part of Mr. Meiyappan’s statement to the crime branch, the source said, adding Mr. Vindoo has corroborated it.
The source declined to reveal the name of the Anti-Corruption and Security Unit (ACSU) official and said they were yet to corroborate it with the ICC.
“We are yet to corroborate Meiyappan’s statement with ICC and we at the moment don’t even know if any person by that name (given by Meiyappan) exists,” he said.
The ACSU keeps players, team members and umpires under surveillance in order to check malpractices in the game.
Crime branch sources said that at no stage BCCI was informed about the “dubious” activities of Mr. Meiyappan.
“The ACSU official was in direct communication with Meiyappan. BCCI was not informed about it,” they said.
Sources said when Mr. Meiyappan was asked why such warning was issued to him, he (Meiyappan) replied “probably because of the company (Vindoo and other bookies) I kept.”
They said the crime branch did not have any transcript of the telephonic conversations Mr. Meiyappan had with Mr. Vindoo with regard to the ICC official asking the former to beware of bookies.
Earlier in the day, a Mumbai court extended the police remand of Mr. Meiyappan, Mr. Vindoo and two others arrested in the IPL betting scandal till June 3, after prosecution sought further custody to unravel their connection with absconding bookies.
Additional Metropolitan Magistrate A.A. Khan granted the crime branch’s plea for extending their remand rejecting the defence counsels’ contention that the offence they had been booked for were bailable and that they had already spent “sufficient time” in Mumbai police’s custody.
In its remand application, police said Meiyappan, Vindoo, Alpesh Patel, a hawala operator, and Prem Taneja, a conduit for bookies, were needed to be interrogated further to know about the wanted bookies Sanjay Jaipur, Pawan Jaipur and Jupiter.