RANGERS chief executive Charles Green is expected to answer to the club's board following new allegations about his relationship with Craig Whyte and allegedly racist comments.

It is understood the Ibrox board is expected to meet before today's Third Division match against Clyde.

The meeting comes as the Rangers Supporters Trust called on the club's directors to step in and clarify Mr Green's future as chief executive.

Last night it emerged documents lodged at Companies House appear to show Mr Green signed off on Craig Whyte's appointment as a director of Sevco 5088 – the company used to acquire the assets of Rangers Football Club plc for £5.5 million.

It is believed the forms were signed during a meeting in London on May 9, 2012, three days before Rangers administrators Duff and Phelps signed an offer letter with Sevco 5088 in a £5.5m deal for the club's assets.

The fans' trust has also called on Mr Green and Mr Ahmad to take legal action against Mr Whyte after the claims he was involved in the Sevco deal that saw Mr Green assume power.

Mr Green had claimed he had met Mr Whyte to secure a deal to acquire his shares for £2 before Mr Green's group were named preferred bidders for the administration-hit club in May last year. The shares later proved irrelevant as an offer to creditors was rejected, prompting the assets purchase by Mr Green's newco.

Mr Green has since admitted teaming up with former owner Mr Whyte in the early stages of the buyout of the club. The former Sheffield United chief executive added Mr Whyte's £25,000 cheque for legal fees over the transfer of shares bounced.

But Mr Green said he was not Mr Whyte's "frontman" and continued to claim Mr Ahmad had fed the former Rangers chairman the information he wanted to hear in order to secure the shares, if needed.

Mr Whyte has threatened legal cases against Mr Green and his group, claiming they were acting as a "front" for him during the £5.5 million deal for the club's assets last summer.

He is demanding £1 million a year for life or 25% of the Ibrox chief executive's shares. The trust has called on those in the Ibrox boardroom to make a decision about Mr Green's future based on his current performance as chief executive.

A trust statement said: "Our club needs clarity over two major issues – the future of Charles Green and the ongoing claims of Craig Whyte. The proper places for these two to be handled are, respectively, the Ibrox boardroom and a court of law.

"The board of the club has enjoyed the backing of the overwhelming majority of the Rangers family and to date no valid concern about its operation or composition has been aired.

"Therefore, it has the competency and authority to deal with the matters surrounding Mr Green's recent performance without interference from the media or external bodies."

Mr Whyte's main argument has appeared to be that the transfer of assets to the newco was illegal, and he remains the rightful owner of the club's assets.

But in the latest salvo in the war of words between the two men, Mr Green last night issued a fresh statement denying the validity of the paperwork that emerged yesterday.

Mr Green said: "It is alleged there is a letter which agrees Mr Whyte and a business partner of his, Aidan Earley, would have a majority shareholding in Sevco 5088. If there is it wasn't signed or endorsed by me."

The statement, on Rangers' official website, read: "Mr Green is appalled by this blatant attempt to discredit him.

"These documents are not correct or valid and he did not sign Craig Whyte or his associate on as directors of Sevco 5088.

"Mr Green was the sole director of Sevco 5088 until he resigned and became the founder director of Sevco Scotland, formed by Scottish solicitors.

"If this documentation was correct then, as Sevco 5088 was formed as the initial bid vehicle, the administrators would have been negotiating a sale of the club to a company which had a director who was clearly forbidden from being involved with it.

"Furthermore, it should strike people as deeply suspicious that these documents are being filed today 11 months after they were supposedly signed and on other documents Mr Green's home address has been mysteriously changed without his knowledge.

"Furthermore, notice was filed publicly in January this year by Field Fisher Waterhouse and is on record at Companies House company seeking to strike off the company, yet four months later directors appointments are now being supposedly filed.

"As stated previously these matters are now in the hands of lawyers who are preparing a file to be sent to Police Scotland and Mr Green cannot comment further on the details of that process."