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Butt, Asif guilty in spot-fixing scam London, November 1 The 12-man jury found Butt (27) guilty of conspiracy to accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat, while Asif (28) was convicted of the charge of conspiracy to cheat in one of the biggest scandals that rocked cricket last year. The decision came on the 20th day of the trial and after 16 hours of deliberation by the jury. But they will remain out on bail till the quantum of their punishment is decided by the jury. Both will be sentenced later this week. Today's developments cap a series of controversies that have haunted Pakistan cricket, including match-fixing allegations against them in the 2000 scandal. The third accused, 19-year-old pacer Mohammad Aamir, who was also involved in the conspiracy, did not face trial as he had pleaded guilty. Butt faces upto seven years in prison for his role in the scandal which broke out after a sting by the now-defunct tabloid 'News of the World' revealed that the duo had conspired with alleged bookie Mazhar Majeed to send down deliberate no balls during the Lord's Test against England. Today's verdicts are on three of the four charges as on the fourth accusation of Asif's acceptance of corrupt payments, the jury returned a hung verdict. The judge has asked the jury to go back into deliberation to decide on the fourth charge. Butt and Asif, along with Majeed, were put on trial here after a police raid on their hotel rooms following the sting operation last year led to recovery of cash, which was allegedly paid by the bookmaker. Butt was banned for 10 years, five of which were suspended, Asif for seven years, while Aamir was suspended for five years by the International Cricket Council in earlier disciplinary action against the trio. The scandal goes back to August last year when the duo conspired with Majeed and Aamir to deliver three no-balls during the Lord's Test. Butt and Asif had pleaded not guilty to the charges and the duo sat quietly in the dock when the verdicts were delivered. The judge had said that he was prepared to accept a 10-2 majority verdict in the case. During the trial, the jury heard from Mazher Mahmood, the News of the World's former investigations editor, that he had approached Majeed disguising himself as an Indian businessman. Majeed, in the course of the sting operation, had claimed that he had six Pakistani players working for him. — PTI
The scandal which broke out in August last year after a sting by the now-defunct tabloid 'News of the World' revealed that the duo (Butt and Asif) had conspired with alleged bookie Mazhar Majeed to send down deliberate no balls during the Lord's Test against England. Butt and Asif, along with Majeed, were put on trial after a police raid on their hotel room led to recovery of cash, which was allegedly paid by the bookmaker. Cricket’s culprits Salman Butt Guilty on two counts - conspiracy to accept corrupt payments and conspiracy to cheat. Faces upto seven years in prison. Mohammad Asif Guilty on one count —conspiracy to cheat. On the other accusation of Asif's acceptance of corrupt payments, the jury returned a hung verdict. Mohammad Aamir, the third accused in the conspiracy, did not face trial as he had pleaded guilty.
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