News Sports Cricket IPL spot fixing: Serious charges against Srinivasan and 12 others, says SC

IPL spot fixing: Serious charges against Srinivasan and 12 others, says SC

New Delhi: The Supreme Court Tuesday said Mudgal committee that probed the IPL spot fixing, has in its report leveled serious charges against 13 cricketers including BCCI ex president N. Srinivasan who along with his

ipl spot fixing serious charges against srinivasan and 12 others says sc ipl spot fixing serious charges against srinivasan and 12 others says sc
New Delhi: The Supreme Court Tuesday said Mudgal committee that probed the IPL spot fixing, has in its report leveled serious charges against 13 cricketers including BCCI ex president N. Srinivasan who along with his son in-law, are in thick of the thing.



The Supreme Court reserved its order on setting up a panel to probe allegation of spot-fixing and betting against some of the cricketers playing the Indian Premier League (IPL) and BCCI president N. Srinivasan.

The apex court bench headed by Justice A.K. Patnaik reserved the order after it was told here that Justice Mukul Mudgal has consented to head the panel to investigate the allegations against the cricketers and Srinivasan.

Senior counsel Gopal Subramaniam at the outset of the hearing told the court that Justice Mudgal, while agreeing to undertake the probe, said he would like to be assisted by former CBI director M.L. Sharma and two police officers, one from Chennai police and the other from Delhi Police.

The Supreme Court, during the course of the last hearing of the matter, asked whether Justice Mudgal is inclined to preside over the probe panel.

However, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) resisted the probe panel, saying that the allegations against the cricketers and Srinivasan are based on an inquiry conducted by Justice Mudgal himself. So, the investigation into those allegations should be undertaken by a different person.

Apparently, unimpressed by the BCCI submission, Justice Patnaik said the court will pass a judicial order and reserved it.