ICC CEO Dave Richardson, while backing the decisions taken by England and Wales Cricket Board and the Champions League Twenty20 Governing Council, said the episode should serve as a warning for other players.
"I encourage all the players to note how engagement in this type of activity can destroy careers and lives. The ICC endorses the decisions of the CLT20 and ECB to impose life bans on Lou Vincent," Richardson said.
Vincent pleaded guilty to 18 breaches of the ECB's anti-corruption regulations. Four breaches related to a Twenty20 match between Lancashire and Durham in June 2008. The remaining 14 charges related to two fixtures played at Hove in August 2011, namely a Sussex v Lancashire Twenty20 match and a Sussex v Kent CB40 match.
"Whilst the strategy of the anti-corruption units remains focused on education, prevention and disruption of efforts to corrupt, in those small number of instances where suspicious activity is uncovered, no stone will be left unturned to bring those involved to justice.