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Asthana bribery case: HC reserves order on CBI plea

May 23, 2019 01:42 am | Updated 01:42 am IST - New Delhi

Agency seeks time for free, fair probe

The CBI on Wednesday told the Delhi High Court that it was asking for more time to complete the investigation in a bribery case involving the agency’s former special director Rakesh Asthana so as to conduct the probe in a free, fair and transparent manner.

Justice Mukta Gupta, after hearing the submissions of the counsel for CBI, Mr. Asthana and two others, reserved the order on the application by the CBI seeking extension of time to complete the probe in the case lodged against Mr. Asthana, DSP Devender Kumar and middleman Manoj Prasad.

ASG Vikramjit Banerjee, representing the CBI, said they were giving effect to the court’s January order by which the agency was asked to complete the investigation in the case within 10 weeks.

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“We are doing the investigation in a free, fair and transparent manner. We are only asking for extension of time to complete the investigation. We are not seeking review of the court’s January 11 verdict, that is the crux of my case,” he said.

The court was told that Mr. Kumar has filed an appeal before the Supreme Court against the High Court order dismissing his and others’ plea to quash the FIR against them. Senior advocate Amrendra Sharan, appearing for Mr. Asthana, said when an order has been passed by the High Court in a criminal case and the petition has been disposed of, the court cannot entertain the review plea or any other miscellaneous application.

The ASG also said the CBI was entitled to implement the order of the High Court and to conduct a fair investigation and he was asking for a short time of four months to complete the investigation.

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The court had earlier questioned the CBI for not sending Letters Rogatory to various countries till mid-April even though it had passed in January the order dismissing the pleas to quash the FIR.LRs are a formal request from a court to a foreign court for some judicial assistance.

On January 11, the court had granted 10 weeks to the probe agency to complete its investigation.

The High Court in January had disposed of three petitions of Mr. Asthana, Mr. Kumar and Mr. Prasad by a common order in which the CBI was directed to complete investigation in the case within ten weeks.

Earlier, Mr. Kumar’s lawyers had told the court that the application was not maintainable according to Section 362 of the Criminal Procedure Code, which states that a court may not alter or review its final order in a matter except to correct a clerical or arithmetical error.

The court had not agreed with the contention, saying the instant matters were writ petitions and not a criminal complaint and therefore, Section 362 may not be applicable.

Mr. Asthana was booked on the allegations of criminal conspiracy, corruption and criminal misconduct under the relevant sections of Prevention of Corruption Act.

Mr. Kumar, earlier the investigating officer in a case involving meat exporter Moin Qureshi, was arrested on the allegations of forgery in recording the statement of Hyderabad-based businessman Sathish Babu Sana, who had alleged having paid bribe to get relief in the case. He was arrested on October 22, 2018 and granted bail on October 31.

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