Hindustan Times (Noida)

‘YOU HAVE NO FAITH IN YOUR FORCE’, SC TELLS PARAM BIR SINGH

- Abraham Thomas letters@hindustant­imes.com

The Supreme Court Friday refused to entertain a plea by former Mumbai Police commission­er Param Bir Singh to shift all cases against him to the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) or to any other state, and questioned his lack of faith in a force he served in for 30 years.

Singh had alleged the state police was prejudiced against him for accusing former Maharashtr­a minister Anil Deshmukh of corruption. The bench of justices Hemant Gupta and V Ramasubram­anian said: “...It is a shocking allegation that you have no faith in your force.”

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Friday refused to entertain a plea by former Mumbai Police commission­er Param Bir Singh to shift all cases against him to the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) or to any other state, and questioned his lack of faith in a force he served in for 30 years.

Singh alleged that the state police was prejudiced against him after he claimed that former Maharashtr­a home minister Anil Deshmukh was involved in corruption. CBI is currently probing the corruption charges Singh levelled against Deshmukh in a letter to chief minister Uddhav Thackeray this March.

Declining his plea, the bench of justices Hemant Gupta and V Ramasubram­anian said: “You are part of Maharashtr­a cadre IPS [and] served the state for 30 years. It is a shocking allegation that you have no faith in your force.”

Singh, who was represente­d by senior advocate Mahesh Jethmalani, said he filed a complaint dated March 20, 2021, accusing Deshmukh of running a “money collection scheme” through the police department. Following this, he was shunted to a low-key post in Mumbai Police’s home guards, and a department­al enquiry was initiated against him. Jethmalani said the officer in charge of the case against him pressurise­d him to withdraw the complaint against

Deshmukh, and threatened him with several criminal cases.

The court dismissed this allegation as a “make believe story” and wondered that if a Dgp-rank officer could succumb to pressure, what would happen to others.

Referring to one of the complaints against Singh, Jethmalani said the complainan­t was involved in five criminal cases, and had now “chosen to turn the gun against the former top cop”. To this, the bench responded: “It is said that persons who live in glass house should not throw stones at others.”

Singh also asked the court to put a blanket stay on any further FIRS against him. The court said it could not grant such a prayer, as it was the magistrate’s duty to do so.

Jethamalan­i claimed that by foisting cases against his client, an attempt was being made to subvert the CBI enquiry against the former Home Minister and the Court must come to the protection of the whistleblo­wer. As the Court refused, Singh eventually agreed to withdraw the petition.

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Param Bir Singh

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