Why would Modi be in jail? Despite his US history, he's not a fugitive, he hasn't been charged with anything criminally wrt. his IPL dealings.
Stanford on the other hand perpetrated a giant swindle, defrauding hundreds of people most of whom are probably in the most vulnerable category. I don't think there's a comparison.
You've just made my point for me. The guy represents all the worst aspects of the corruption that has recently taken hold of the game. Now I'm sorry to say this, but just because somebody has not been charged with wrongdoing in
India, a country in which perhaps two dozen families (of which Modi's is one) hold the fate of over a billion people in their hands, does not mean he has done no wrong.
There is publicly available information to suggest that plenty of IPL-related deals were highly dodgy and that Modi and others were placed in and allowed to benefit from conflict of interest situations that simply would not have been acceptable in say the UK (not a corruption-free paradise I know).
Yet imagine if someone like the current head of the ECB became immensely rich on the back of a new cricket spin-off? The links between Modi and all sorts of Indian cricket administrative nabobs are so extensive and have been so ill-investigated that one can only surmise that people there are either inured to the shenanigans of the Modis of the world or have allowed themselves to be hoodwinked by them.
One thing is certain: Modi and the nexus of crooked bookies and corrupt administrators surrounding him have changed cricket in India for the worse, of that there is absolutely no doubt. In fact the present era, in which the Indian team is pretty much guaranteed to quite brazenly and publicly QUIT midway through the Second Test of overseas tours they don't fancy, will perhaps - if Modi and his ilk are allowed to continue to hold sway - in future come be seen as a golden age of heroic windmill tilters who really strove manfully against all odds.
Their Team India successors will either sign contracts specifying that they will only play at home and with the approval of their IPL bosses or, failing that, will send nominees to play on their behalf. (BCCI will do some arm-twisting at ICC-level over the stats).
How ironic that Lalit Modi - kidnapper, violent thug, cocaine trafficker - should be presently engaged in attempting to convince a London court that Chris Cairns is the crook and he the honest man! Modi has the economic power to suborn any number of witnesses who depend upon him for a living, so I suspect he'll win. No doubt Sachin himself would - notwithstanding the unseemly repercussions of his lying to protect a teammate in the 'Monkeygate' business - have been prepared to perjure himself for the IPL god, were the need to have arisen.