Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Narada case: IPS sent to judicial custody

- Press Trust of India letters@hindustant­imes.com

MIRZA WAS BURDWAN SUPERINTEN­DENT OF POLICE WHEN THE STING OPERATION WAS ALLEGEDLY CARRIED OUT BY SAMUEL MATHEWS OF NARADA NEWS PORTAL IN 2014

KOLKATA: A s pecial Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) court on Monday remanded suspended Indian Police Services (IPS) officer S M H Mirza in judicial custody till October 15 in the Narada tapes scandal case.

Rejecting Mirza’s bail plea, Judge Anupam Mukhopadhy­ay remanded him in 14 days’ judicial custody till October 15 on a prayer by a CBI lawyer.

Mirza was t he Burdwan superinten­dent of police when the sting operation was allegedly carried out by Samuel Mathews of Narada news portal in 2014.

Mirza was arrested last week and produced i n t he court, which had initially remanded him in the agency’s custody for five days.

Opposing the suspended officer’s bail plea, the CBI counsel on Monday prayed for his judicial custody, claiming that he is an IPS officer and an influentia­l person.

He said Mirza, if released on bail, may try to influence witnesses.

Mirza’s lawyer, however, submitted that the officer was suspended in November 2017 and as such there was no question of him being an influentia­l person.

The lawyer also submitted that Mirza has cooperated with the investigat­ion all along and has appeared before the CBI whenever he was summoned by the investigat­ors.

The purpose of Mirza’s arrest has been served, with he being questioned along with another accused on Monday and the subsequent reconstruc­tion of the events surroundin­g the alleged pay-offs which happened at a flat in south Kolkata, the counsel added.

The tapes that had surfaced ahead of the 2016 West Bengal assembly polls and persons resembling senior Trinamool Congress leaders and Mirza were seen accepting money from representa­tives of a fictitious company in return for favours.

The Calcutta high court had ordered a CBI probe into the Narada sting operation case on a public i nterest l i t i gation which sought an i mpartial investigat­ion into the footages.

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