When the Delhi Police released tapes of a conversation recorded between Chronje and Indian bookies Sanjeev Rice in the beginning of April 2000, it was found with itself and South African cricket officials and widespread dismissal.
Chronje was initially identified in a call by a bizarre of fate.
Pradeep Srivastava, Deputy Commissioner of Delhi’s Crime Department, was working on cases of forced recovery and took some tapes home with him.
One of the children of Srivastava listened to a wire-tap cassette, which left the house in a high-Fi system, and asked his father why he had a recording of Kronje’s voice.
Srivastava’s son had seen the interview after the match with Chronje on Indian television on the previous day and recognized his voice.
With the closing of the net, Kronje came clean.
On 11 April 2000, at 3 am, he confessed to South African Security Advisor Rori Stan, who worked for the Australian cricket team at a Durban Hotel at a Durban Hotel, where the pair was living.
“I went into her suite and all the lights were on,” Stan remembered.
“They had a handwritten document and said ‘you may have guessed, but the goods being said against me are really true.”
A month later, Cronje participated in the King Commission, where he was offered immunity from the prosecution in exchange for complete disclosure.
During the three days of cross exams, aired on television and radio, which caught the world of South Africa and the cricket, Cronje gave his own side of the story.
Or at least some of it, looking at the input of their own lawyers.
He asked to take large amounts of money as well as to accept a leather jacket for his wife berth, in exchange for informing the bookies and to play badly.
But he claimed that South Africa never “throw” or “fixed” a match under his captaincy.
“For my wife, family and teammates, in particular, I apologize,” he said while reading a robot of an opening statement lasting 45 minutes.
Crick was banned from cricket to life, the suspension was unsuccessful.
The truth of what Kronje said during the investigation into a plane crash in June 2002 and the investigation was stopped in further investigation.
Kronje boarded a small cargo aircraft in Johannesburg, which went down to the hilly areas amid bad weather conditions while trying to land at George Airport.
Chronje was then working as an account manager for a manufacturer of heavy-duty construction equipment, flying back to his wife at his home near a luxury golf resort Fancort Estate.
His death was placed below for weather, pilot error, and possible instrument failure, but still inspired the principles of conspiracy.
Former Nottinghamshire captain Clive Rice, who played three ODIs for South Africa, called Chronje’s death “very mess” and was associated with the later death of former South African coach Bob Wulmer, who was in charge of Pakistan when he died.
“Some people needed him [Cronje] Outside. Was it one, two, or 15 people who were about to die, it did not matter, “Rice said, who died in 2015.
“Honey was what was going to go and it was fine if he could cover it as a plane crash.”
Erylie, Cronje, predicted himself in speeches, and wrote in a magazine, “continuous travel from the air continuously” due to the ability to “die in aircraft accident”.
Ed Hawkins, an expert betting discovered journalist, dismissed the notion that the bookies were somehow behind the incident.
Hawkins said, “I did not get any information worthy of attempts to start a time or full scale on a full scale,” Hawkins said.
Stan, the security advisor called it “Ludicus”, to suggest that “there was a conspiracy to bring down the aircraft by bringing it down.