"We are carrying out an internal investigation into claims by the Sunday Times and are also consulting with lawyers so that they should look into the article in the British media and prepare questions to its authors," Daiva Anciūnaitė, project manager at Baltic Clipper, told BNS without elaborating.
Lithuania's National Olympic Committee (LNOC) says it was assured by Baltic Clipper that it had not sold a single ticket to foreign citizens.
"They said that not a single ticket was sold to any foreign citizen," Vytautas Zubernis, secretary general of Lithuania's National Olympic Committee, told BNS on Monday.
Zubernis said the LNOC had not received any information from the International Olympic Committee or organizers of the London Olympics regarding the ticket sale scandal.
"We have to wait for some information from the International Olympic Committee or organizers of the London Olympics. If we receive information from the International Olympic Committee or organizers of the London Olympics, then we'll have to do something," Zubernis said.
A spokeswoman for the Lithuanian Prosecutor General's Office told BNS on Monday prosecutors had no information on any pre-trial investigation into alleged illegal distribution of Olympics tickets.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) launched an investigation on Friday after reports emerged that top tickets were being sold on the black market.
The Sunday Times investigation revealed that Olympic officials and agents were selling tickets on the black market for a price up to ten times higher than their face value.
According to the investigation, 27 agents representing 54 countries were involved in the affair.
The official ticket agent for Serbia offered about 1,500 tickets to events including the opening and closing ceremonies for 80,000 fees in cash whilst promising to falsify information from 1,400 Serbian passports to conceal the illicit deal from the London organizers.
China’s official ticket agency was also involved in the scandal as agents agreed to sell dozens of AA category tickets – the best in the stadium, originally meant for the British public – to fake Middle Eastern tout for up to £6,000 each.
The London 2012 Olympics will take place 27 July to 12 August.
Baltic Clipper is the official agent selling Olympic tickets in Lithuania.
