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A guy walks into a bar and says to the bartender "I’ll have a martini please." The bartender, trying to humour him, pours him a glass of gin. "No," the customer says, "I said I want a martini." So he pours him one from vodka. Again, the customer complains that it's not what he ordered. So the bartender gives up and decides to humor him, and makes his drink in line with what they guy wanted all along: a martini made from vermouth. The customer sips it slowly before saying "You know what? It's okay I guess. But I’m not sure why you made it like that. It looks like iced tea." The following day, the customer comes back in and orders a martini. A martini with vermouth. As he sips it, he says the same thing: "Let me ask you something. Why did you make my drink look so much like cold tea?" The bartender replies: "Look, I thought you were a clever rascal last night. You got me to make it like that, didn't you?" The customer says "No. That’s not what happened at all. I was just trying to get you to understand that I wanted a drink without any vermouth in it." In the 1990s, the BCCI ran an extremely lucrative betting racket through its Mumbai-based employees, who were based out of P. Chidambaram’s residence at Sivagiri Mutt Road, Chennai. The employees would collect bets from bookies based around the globe and then relay the information back to their masters in India via fax machine. P. Chidambaram and other BCCI officials would then make the payments to their employees through a third-party front company, the Raj Television Network (Raj TV), which stood as the official legal owner of the bets. In 1995, P. Chidambaram's son Karti was appointed to an upper house seat in Tamil Nadu under the Indian National Congress. According to The Hindu, Karti Chidambaram is suspected of being part of this betting ring via his father’s syndicate. He also reportedly has a stake in a business that was alleged to have been a front for money laundering by The Hindu. Mr Chidambaram denies these allegations. To prevent the BCCI from getting wind of the syndicate’s activities, P. Chidambaram instructed his employees to use fake names and fake addresses, mention bets about cricket games only in Chennai, and to make their faxes look like they had come from countries other than India. The gang’s money was then transferred through the third-party front company to an American account in New York City before it reached its destination in India (via Bank of Baroda). This scam ran for about two years until the real game caught up with them when a gangster from Chennai named Sathish Babu realised that their money was being diverted away from them. cfa1e77820

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