Deccan Chronicle

Even major probes make no headway under CID

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT HYDERABAD, JAN. 6

Officials from the Crime Investigat­ion Department (CID) have filed a mere two chargeshee­ts in connection with sensationa­l cases that were reported in 2013 and

2014. Yet another pointer to the sorry state-ofaffairs is that although a number of sensationa­l cases were registered by the agency since 2014, there has been no headway in any of them.

Senior officials from the department have confirmed that they filed a comprehens­ive chargeshee­t in connection with Eamcet medical question paper leak that was registered under various Sections of the IPC and also under Section 8 of the A.P. Public Exami nations (Prevention of Malpractic­es and Unfair Means) Act on July 25,

2016. Sources said that the CID officials have found that the question papers of Medical Eamcet-II were leaked from the printing press in Delhi. They were subsequent­ly shared on WhatsApp with select agents, brokers and coaching centres. Some coaching centres went to the extent of hiring special trainers, who explained the leaked questions to students by way of camps held in Hyderabad, Goa, Bengaluru, Chennai and other places.

Towards this ‘facility’, brokers and coaching centres charged lakhs of rupees from students.

According to CID officials, around 56,000 students, including 18,000 from Andhra Pradesh, appeared for the exam held on July 9, 2016. Not ironically, those who ‘prepared’ themselves from the leaked question papers obtained top ranks, which triggered doubts and led to unearthing the scam.

“We have filed a charge sheet before the court regarding the Eamcet -II medical question paper leak. The trial is expected to commence soon. We will submit proper evidence in connection with the case during the trial,” said DGP M Mahendar Reddy.

Bus fire incident: Around ten passengers travelling by a private tourist bus were charred to death after fire broke out inside the vehicle in Mahbubnaga­r district in 2013. CID officials filed a charge sheet before the court when T Krishna Prasad was the additional DG. After Govind Singh took charge as the agency’s chief, though a number of cases were reported, CID officials filed a charge sheet only in the Eamcet-II medical question paper leak case.

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