ED has issued summons? Have not received any, tweets Lalit Modi
The former IPL chief has been asked to appear in India in three weeks
Mumbai: Former IPL commissioner Lalit Modi on Tuesday took to micro-blogging site Twitter clarifying that he had not received any summons from the Enforcement Directorate regarding the IPL money laundering case.
I have received no summons. They know where I live in london. Awaiting the same https://t.co/7GJ9Q6yVqU
— Lalit Kumar Modi (@LalitKModi) July 6, 2015
According to an ED source, "Summons were issued last week to Modi through his attorney, who appeared before us for an adjudicatory hearing." The source added that Modi has been asked to appear in three weeks.
Read: Enforcement Directorate calls Lalit Modi for grilling
Earlier last week, the agency also recorded the statement of former BCCI chief N Shrinivasan. The case relates to a 2008 deal between World Sports Group (WSG) and Multi Screen Media (MSM) for television rights of Indian Premier League (IPL) worth Rs 425 crore.
BCCI, through Shrinivasan, filed an FIR in Chennai in 2010 under various provisions of the IPC, while two years later the ED registered a case under Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA) in the matter.
Read: IPL money-laundering case: ED records statement of Srinivasan against Lalit Modi
In 2008, the BCCI awarded 10-year media rights to WSG for USD 918 million. In the same year, WSG entered into a deal with MSM to make Sony the official broadcaster. The contract was replaced a year later with a nine-year deal where MSM paid USD 1.63 billion.
The ED started a probe in 2009 under Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) to investigate allegations that payment of Rs 425 crore facilitation fees by MSM Singapore to WSG Mauritius was made in an illegal way.
The payments were made to "unauthorised beneficiaries" and not the cricketing regulating bodies as per the terms of the contract, ED said.