Hindustan Times (Noida)

SC tells CBI, ED not to delay investigat­ions

OUT OF 121 CASES PROBED BY CBI AGAINST SITTING AND FORMER LAWMAKERS, PROBES WERE NOT OVER IN 37 OF THEM; IN 122 CASES WITH ED, 76 CASES WERE PENDING

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Wednesday asked the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) and the Enforcemen­t Directorat­e (ED) not to keep the sword of investigat­ion hanging over MPS and MLAS indefinite­ly, and to conclude such cases one way or the other.

“There is a case pending investigat­ion since 2010 by Ed...another case by CBI since 2013. The charge sheet is yet to be filed. Why should an investigat­ion remain pending for so long? Don’t keep the sword hanging over them...don’t give an impression that the investigat­ion is still on. Either file a charge sheet or close the case,” a bench, led by Chief Justice of India NV Ramana, told solicitor general Tushar Mehta, who appeared for CBI and ED.

The bench, which also comprised justices Dhananjaya Y Chandrachu­d and Surya Kant, was hearing a PIL filed by Bharatiya Janata Party leader and advocate Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay, who has raised the issue of fast-tracking criminal trial against lawmakers and constituti­on of special courts.

After going through the status report submitted by CBI and a note shared by amicus curiae (to assist the court) and senior advocate Vijay Hansaria, the bench underscore­d that out of 121 cases probed by CBI against sitting and former MPS and MLAS, investigat­ions were not over in 37 of them. Similarly, in 122 cases registered by ED under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), investigat­ions were pending in 76 cases.

“We want an explanatio­n of the delay in investigat­ions by the CBI and ED... We have a lot of time but we don’t know if investigat­ing agencies also have the time to analyse why these cases have been pending for so long,” commented the bench.

It observed that the court does not want to demoralise CBI or ED but the delay in completion of the probe required a proper explanatio­n and swift action.

About the cases being probed by ED, the bench told Mehta: “Your report is very inconclusi­ve. You have not given any reason for not filing a charge sheet for 10 years in some of the cases. You attach properties but you do not file charge sheets. No purpose will be served only by attaching properties... the cases have to be decided either way. You have to conclude them.”

The court also asked the S-G to have an action plan to evaluate the manpower and other resources required by CBI and ED. “Just like us (courts), investigat­ing agencies are also suffering from lack of infrastruc­ture, manpower and other resources,” observed the bench.

At this, Mehta said that he would have a joint meeting of directors of both the agencies to figure out the shortcomin­gs and resolve the issues relating to manpower. The S-G also requested the bench to issue directives on expediting the trials against the lawmakers by fixing a timeline of six months for completion of investigat­ions and a reasonable time frame for conclusion of trials. “Where are the judges? There are 1000 cases pending in one trial court. How do you expect us to expedite trials? We wanted the Government of India to create special courts separately and provide infrastruc­ture but it looks like you are not in a position to do it...,” retorted the court.

The amicus also raised the issue of withdrawal of cases by several state government­s including the Uttar Pradesh government that has withdrawn 77 cases against political leader Sadhvi Prachi and three sitting MLAS – Sangeet Som, Suresh Rana and Kapil Dev — for making inflammato­ry statements during the 2013 Muzaffarna­gar riots.

The bench said that it has already issued a direction earlier this month that no criminal case against MPS or MLAS can be withdrawn without an approval of the high court of the concerned state.

“We are not against withdrawin­g cases but they cannot be withdrawn just by using the term ‘malicious prosecutio­n’. But sitting in Delhi, we cannot examine all the cases states want to withdraw. Let the states go to the high courts and satisfy the high courts about withdrawal,” said the court, adding it will soon issue further directions in the case.

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