Hindustan Times (Patiala)

‘LEAKS’ IN CBI CASE IRK CJI: ‘YOU DO NOT DESERVE A HEARING’

Bench lashes out over reports about CBI director Alok Verma’s response to the CVC and wide coverage of DIG Manish Sinha’s petition

- Bhadra Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com n

NEW DELHI: High drama was witnessed in the Supreme Court on Tuesday, with Chief Justice of India (CJI) Ranjan Gogoi, whose bench was to hear the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) case, taking umbrage at two media reports and deferring the hearing to November 29 even as he warned that he would not allow anyone to “use the court as a platform” for anyone to express “whatever they want to.”

High drama was witnessed in the Supreme Court on Tuesday, with Chief Justice of India (CJI) Ranjan Gogoi, whose bench was to hear the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) case, taking umbrage at two media reports and deferring the hearing to November 29 even as he warned that he would not allow anyone to “use the court as a platform” for anyone to express “whatever they want to.”

The bench took strong exception to the wide coverage of a petition filed by a senior CBI officer, Manish Sinha, in the Supreme Court on Monday that made sensationa­l claims against a minister, several CBI officers, the National Security Advisor, the country’s top vigilance officer, and the law secretary.

It said this coverage went against the court’s desire to maintain “respect of the institutio­n (CBI)” and confidenti­ality. A copy of Sinha’s petition was shared widely by his advocate after mentioning the matter in court — as is the general practice.

The court declined an early hearing of the petition.

Chief Justice Gogoi saw it differentl­y: “Yesterday we refused a mentioning [of Sinha’s petition] and expressed that highest degree of confidenti­ality should be maintained. And this litigant gives it to everybody. Our effort to maintain respect for the institutio­n is not respected.”

The court was also incensed over what it initially thought was a leak of CBI director Alok Verma’s affidavit filed in a sealed cover before the bench in response to the Central Vigilance Commission­er’s (CVC’s) enquiry report on the corruption allegation­s against the agency chief.

“We want to know what is going on. This court is not a platform for people to come and express what they want. This is a place where adjudicati­on of legal rights takes place. And we intend to set it right,” CJI Gogoi remarked.

It was subsequent­ly clarified on Verma’s behalf that the news report on a website was not this but his response to the Central Vigilance Commission queries that were put to him pursuant to the court’s October 26 order asking the vigilance commission­er to complete the probe within two weeks. That report expressed Verma’s doubts about the integ- rity of the CVC and also hinted at the involvemen­t of someone from the Prime Minister’s Office in the case against him.

Sinha had on Monday approached the top court against his transfer to Nagpur, the orders for which were issued on October 24, within hours of the government asking Verma and CBI special director, Rakesh Asthana, to proceed on leave.

The two officers were engaged in an internecin­e power struggle and had also accused each other of corruption.

Verma challenged this order, resulting in the court’s October 26 order to CVC which filed its report last week. Verma was given till November 19 to file his response to CVC’s findings which the bench described as a mixed bag.

Upset with the reports, the court refused to even hear Verma’s petition questionin­g his forced leave. He is to retire on January 31.

On Tuesday, it was clear all was not well even as CJI walked into the court a few minutes late.

He brushed away lawyers waiting to mention urgent cases and handed over a copy of the second news report (the one about Verma’s responses to CVC) to senior advocate Fali Nariman, Verma’s lawyer.

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