2002 hit-and-run case: Salman puts up evidence to show he was not driving

"There is no reason why Khan’s statement in the court and Singh’s testimony should not be accepted."

April 10, 2015 07:08 pm | Updated April 02, 2016 08:15 pm IST - Mumbai

One person was killed and four others were injured when Khan’s car rammed into a shop in suburban Bandra in 2002.

One person was killed and four others were injured when Khan’s car rammed into a shop in suburban Bandra in 2002.

Facing charges of culpable homicide in the 2002 hit-and-run case, Bollywood actor Salman Khan on Friday contended that he was not driving the vehicle and it was not speeding even as he alleged that “evidence had been manufactured to falsely implicate him”.

His lawyer Srikant Shivade told Judge D W Deshpande that it was Khan’s driver Ashok Singh and not the actor who was driving the Toyota Land Cruiser SUV at the time of the mishap and that this has been brought out in the examination of Singh as defence witness.

“Merely because Salman Khan had got down from the driver’s side does not mean that he was driving”...We have explained this in cross-examination (of defence witness) and also in the statement of the accused (Khan),” said his lawyer Srikant Shivade who commenced final arguments on Friday.

Khan, 49, is accused of ramming his SUV in a roadside bakery in suburban Bandra on September 28, 2002, killing one person and injuring four who were sleeping outside. The prosecution has also alleged he was drunk and was driving without a licence, a charge denied by the actor.

Contesting the prosecution case that witnesses saw Khan getting down from the driver’s side as he was driving, Shivade said, “This is because the left door got jammed in the impact of the mishap and did not open”.

There is no reason why Khan’s statement in the court and Singh’s testimony should not be accepted, he argued while picking up holes in the prosecution’s case.

The defence taken by the accused that he was not driving and Singh was behind the wheel was not an “afterthought” as claimed by the prosecution, his lawyer said.

The only access for a person sitting on the front left side was to get down from the right side as the left door was jammed and did not open, there was no other choice and that is what Salman did, Shivade argued.

Referring to prosecution’s charge that Khan was driving at a speed of 90 to 100 kms per hour, his lawyer said this was not possible.

The distance between J W Marriot hotel (where the actor had gone with a friend and brother) and the mishap spot was 7 to 8 kms, while the time taken by his car to cover this distance was between 2.15 am to 2.45 am, Shivade submitted to buttress his argument that the vehicle was not speeding.

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