Two IPL franchises -- Pune Warriors and Royal Challengers Bangalore -- felt the repercussions of the spot-fixing scandal when I-T officals conducted surveys at their offices.
Income Tax authorities today conducted surveys at the offices of Indian Premier League team franchises Pune Warriors in Pune and Mumbai and Royal Challengers Bangalore offices in the southern city as part of their probe into alleged tax evasion.
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I-T sources said officials were sent to collect documents and details of the transactions, share holding patterns and financial investments of the franchises. The survey is also conducted at Amby Valley in Lonavala near Mumbai in connection with the Pune Warriors case, they said.
The Income Tax department is looking for the funding patterns for purchase of players by these franchises.
According to preliminary reports, the I-T authorities had only visited the business premises of the franchises. The surveys are being conducted in the wake of Pune Warriors' player Mohnish Mishra's statement that he had got much more than his prescribed auction amount under the table as black money during a 'sting' operation conducted by a news channel, which claimed to have exposed corruption in the IPL.
Mishra, however, later retracted his statement, saying he had done that casually "to develop his value".
The Pune Warriors team had suspended Mishra, hours after the BCCI handed him the same punishment for his alleged involvement in spot-fixing, pending a board inquiry.u00a0
Income Tax sources said similar survey operations are also being conducted at the offices of Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB), the IPL franchise in Bangalore.u00a0