Case against Prabhakar for defrauding public money
After a few days of lull, the match fixing scandal once again hogged the headlines on Saturday
AC Ganesh
03-Jun-2000
After a few days of lull, the match fixing scandal once again hogged
the headlines on Saturday. And not surprisingly it was Manoj Prabhakar
who was at the `centre of the action.'
Prabhakar who acted as a super sleuth to 'expose' the involvement of
players and administrators in the match-fixing and cleanse the system
is alleged to be involved in a fraud. Evidence collected by the
Nainital District Police shows that Prabhakar has defrauded public
money to a tune of Rs. 50 crores through fake chit fund schemes.
Senior Superintendent of Police, Akhilesh Mehrotra who is in charge of
the case said "Evidence collected by the Nainital District police
shows that Prabhakar was involved in a fraud of public money to the
tune of Rs 50 crore, invested in his fake chit fund scheme by
investors." Mehrotra added "four cases of fraud have been
registered till now against Prabhakar, who indulged in a massive
public campaign, including addressing several public meetings, in 1994
in a bid to convince people to invest their money into the Apes India
group of companies of which he was one of the directors.
Prabhakar then opened several branches of the said company with names
like Apes India Leasing and Finance Ltd, Apes Saving and Mutual
Benefit India, Apes Housing Finance and Construction Ltd. Mehrotra
said that the company allegedly floated by the former cricketer had
almost 360 branches in Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya
Pradesh, Delhi, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh and Punjab.
As a director of the company, Prabhakar is said to have signed the
FDs, bonds and the passbooks given to the investors besides the
service book given to the company`s employees. Further, he also
publicised that former UP Chief Minister Narayan Dutt Tiwari was
one of the patrons of the company which Tiwari has denied. On
investigation it was found that none of the companies existed in
these places and even the headquarters at Lucknow has been closed
down. The company`s main office at Lucknow and its offices at
Haldwani have since been sealed by the police.
Meanwhile, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and the
Income Tax (IT) authorities are slowly but steadily moving ahead in
their investigation into the match-fixing scandal. The IT department
has got into the act swiftly in cities like Calcutta, Delhi, Mumbai,
Hyderabad and Baroda apart from other places. According to IT sources,
the CBI has also approached the IT department asking it to furnish the
details of income and assets of bookies, players and officials
allegedly involved in the controversy.
The department has been very active having started making assessments
of income and preparing synopsis of returns filed by the cricketers
and officials whose names have surfaced during the course of the
investigations in match-fixing. An Indian newspaper quotes a CBI
official as saying that the CBI and the IT department are considering
freezing bank accounts of cricketers and members of their families
suspected to be involved in match-fixing.
The premier investigative agency in the country has decided to seek
the help of Enforcement Directorate (ED) to investigate hawala
transactions, if any, involved in the scandal. Efforts are on to
contact a Delhi player, who is currently abroad, by the investigative
authorities. The name of the player surfaced during the course of
investigations conducted at Mumbai by the agency.
Talking to an Indian newspaper, a CBI official was of the opinion
that Manoj Prabhakar's videotapes would 'give a new turn' to
the probe. He said "CBI will try its best to corroborate its contents
during examinations of suspected players."
Meanwhile, the BCCI secretary Jaywant Lele said in an interview to
an Indian newspaper on Friday that the board's formal reply to
Prabhakar's tapes have been put on hold. The tapes, which have
secretly recorded interviews with players, administrators and others
has been put on the hold till BCCI president AC Muthiah returns from
abroad. Lele in the interview said "Legal opinion has been sought but,
the course of action will only be clear once the president returns."
When asked about the players' names mentioned in the tapes, Lele
stood by his earlier stand that the tapes were doctored. Lele said "I
didn't implicate either Kapil Dev, Mohammed Azharuddin or Ajay Jadeja
(in match-fixing). The names were taken by Prabhakar himself. I only
said I, too, could take names if I wasn't bothered about producing
evidence."
Meanwhile, the Minister of State for Sports and Youth Affairs Syed
Shahnawaz Hussain on Friday asked the players and officials to cooperate with CBI to enable it to unearth the truth behind match fixing
and betting. He said no time frame has been fixed for the CBI to
complete the investigations.