Jury retires in Cairns perjury trial

Former Black Caps captain faces charges of falsification after suing IPL founder Lalit Modi over controversial Tweet


Afp November 25, 2015
PHOTO: AFP

LONDON: Jurors in the London perjury trial of former New Zealand cricket captain Chris Cairns retired to consider their verdicts on Tuesday and were told to return to court on Friday.

Cairns, 45, faces a charge of perjury after successfully suing Indian Premier League (IPL) founder Lalit Modi for accusing him of match-fixing on Twitter in 2010.

Cairns, a New Zealand great, won £90,000 ($135,700) in damages from Modi in the March 2012 trial, but he is alleged to have lied to the court when he said that he had "never, ever cheated at cricket".

Former New Zealand skipper Cairns accused of perjury

Cairns also faces a charge of perverting the course of justice over allegations that he persuaded fellow cricketer Lou Vincent to provide a false witness statement for him during a Skype conversation.

Cairns's legal adviser Andrew Fitch-Holland, 50, is also accused of perverting the course of justice. Both men deny the charges.

After initial deliberations, the jury of five men and seven women at London's Southwark Crown Court was sent home for the day and told to return on Friday morning.

Cairns 'lied...threatened player with bat', court hears

The jury has heard evidence from high-profile former cricketers including current New Zealand captain Brendon McCullum and former Australia skipper Ricky Ponting.

Vincent told the court that he helped to fix matches under "direct orders" from Cairns while the pair played for the Chandigarh Lions in the Indian Cricket League (ICL) -- a precursor to the IPL -- in 2008.

McCullum said that Cairns, the Lions captain, had approached him with a "business proposition" about match-fixing.

Modi's allegations concerned two editions of the ICL that took place between March and April 2008 and between October and November of the same year.

As well as the £90,000 damages, Modi was also obliged to pay out £1.4 million in damages and costs following Cairns's libel action.

Perjury is a criminal offence in Britain, for which those found guilty can be sent to prison.

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