New Delhi, May 17: Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) vice-president Kamal Morarka does not rule out some board members being offered money in exchange of their votes at the annual general body meeting (AGM) in Jaipur last year.``It is quite likely that some board members were tempted with money to get their votes at the last agm in Jaipur,'' Morarka said on Sportstime of TWI.At a press conference recently, BCCI joint secretary Jyoti Bajpai had alleged that some people were offered money during the AGM last year to vote for a particular candidate. ``Jyoti Bajpai is our respected member and if he says so, then it must be true,'' Morarka said joining the issue with him.Police says no to SANEW DELHI: Delhi Police is unlikely to handover tapes purportedly containing conversation between sacked South African cricket captain Hansie Cronje and London-based NRI businessman Sanjeev Chawla as demanded by South African authorities, police sources said.While Joint Commissioner of Police (Crime) KK Paul said that they were yet to receive any request from the South African authorities, sources in the Crime Branch said the possibility of acceeding to such a request was remote.South African Government has made the request for the tapes of conversations purportedly between Cronje and Chawla through its foreign office as the commission set up to probe cricket match-fixing wanted the tapes.The sources said the South African courts would have to issue letters rogatory to their Indian counterparts to get the tapes, which is a case property and the ``only concrete evidence'' available with the Delhi Police.Police is also not happy with the ``inadequate response'' of the South African authorities in providing Hansie Cronje's voice samples, the sources said.South African officials said in Johannesburg that the Indian request through Interpol for Cronje's voice sample would be considered once the tapes were handed over to them.Meanwhile, the sources said Delhi Police is preparing papers for submission to the courts for issuance of letters rogatory seeking details of the players' bank accounts, their contacts and other information from authorities in South Africa.The papers would be submitted to the courts in afortnight, they said.