The Asian Age

‘Not enough evidence to summon Asthana’

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New Delhi, March 7: A Delhi court on Saturday said there was not sufficient evidence to summon former Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) special director Rakesh Asthana in a bribery case lodged by the agency.

Special Judge Sanjeev Aggarwal made the observatio­n while taking cognisance of a charge sheet filed by the CBI, in which Asthana's name was mentioned in Column 12.

Column 12 means there is not enough evidence to make a person an accused.

The court made a similar observatio­n about CBI Deputy Superinten­dent of Police (DSP) Devender Kumar, who was arrested by the agency in 2018 and later got bail.

His name was also mentioned in Column 12 of the charge sheet.

The court, however, summoned “middleman” Manoj Prasad, who was arrayed as an accused in the charge sheet.

It also summoned Prasad's brother Someshwar Srivastava and father-in-law Sunil Mittal, saying there was sufficient material to proceed against them.

Both Srivastava's and Mittal's name had cropped up during the probe. The court directed Prasad, Srivastava and Mittal to appear before the court on April 13.

“There is sufficient evidence to proceed against Manoj Prasad, Someshwar Srivastava and Sunil Mittal. I summon them for April 13. Rakesh Asthana and Devender Kumar are not being summoned since there is no sufficient evidence against them,” the judge said.

The CBI may file a chargeshee­t if it finds anything against Asthana in its ongoing probe, Aggarwal said.

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