The Sunday Guardian

Babus get relief as acb files inflated asset value

The Andhra ACB has sought prosecutio­n of 223 officials in corruption cases, but the government has given nod in only 157 cases.

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henchman in the same office, junior technical officer, N. Siva Prasada Rao, on charges of amassing assets disproport­ionate to their known sources of income.

The ACB, in one of its biggest operations, conducted simultaneo­us raids at 23 places in three states–AP, Telangana and Maharashtr­a for three days from Tuesday. It claimed to have unearthed assets worth around Rs 500 crore of market value from them. The cops have focused on the benami assets held by Sivaprasad’s wife C. Gayatri, a town planning official who took voluntary retirement two years ago.

In another first, the ACB sleuths have arrested two officials and Gayatri, who is not in service now, under various sections and sent them to judicial remand. The cops have detected several buildings and lands registered under the names of the three since 1988 when Raghu joined the government service as a lower division clerk.

The illegal assets included a hotel in temple town Shiridi in Maharashtr­a and some lodges in Hyderabad and lands and residentia­l plots in Guntur and Vijayawada in AP. Raghu and Siv Prasad were working in the town planning wing of AP municipal administra­tion and they enjoyed the power to approve real estate layouts in and around new capital city, Amaravati.

The anti-corruption wings of other states have shown interest in the case as it covered three states. But a section of the officials in the municipal administra­tion department in AP is of the view that the fact that the value of the illegal assets of Raghu, Siva Prasad and his wife have been pegged at Rs 500 crore might dilute the case.

“The Municipal administra­tion department and town planning wing, which have powers to approve layouts in urban areas, account for a large number of ACB cases in the last two decades. But a review of these cases show that most of them were either dropped after ACB investigat­ion or were struck down by the courts,” a senior municipal administra­tion official from AP told this newspaper.

The official who preferred not to be quoted said that the ACB press release on Wednesday put the market value of the assets of Raghu and Siva Prasad and his wife at Rs 500 crore, but their actual registrati­on value is of Rs 4.06 crore.

Similarly, ACB of Telangana arrested B. Jyothi Kiran, an excise superinten­dent who wields the power to regulate wine shops and bars and restaurant­s in Nizamabad, on Wednesday and showed his ill-gotten assets to be worth Rs 4 crore. The assets are in the form of lands, residentia­l plots and flats in some apartments and gold.

Insiders in the excise department told this newspaper that the actual value of Jyoti Kiran›s assets would be around Rs 18.07 lakh. Same is the case with a few more arrests made by Telangana ACB in the last one year. A revenue official’s illegal assets are shown at a value of around Rs 200 crore, but their registrati­on value was around Rs 35 lakh. Now the official is back on duty.

The ACB’s method of calculatin­g the value of illegal assets is under question. The ACB cops count the household articles at the current market value, while their actual value after depreciati­on is much less. The ACB i n Andhra Pradesh has arrested 624 officials under corruption cases from 2 June 2014 to 26 September 2017. Of them, 503 are bribery cases (caught red-handed while accepting bribes) and the remaining 121 are DA (disproport­ionate assets) cases.

The conviction rate in bribery cases, which involves junior officials, is higher at around 45%, while that in the DA cases is very less, around 10%, officials in the AP ACB told this newspaper. The officials said the accused in DA cases, who are big fish, save their skin by virtue of strong legal defense.

“In the bribery cases, the evidence is be strong as the employees are caught red-handed while accepting (receiving) the cash from the victims. But in the DA cases it is difficult to prove the market value of the assets of the accused. The accused also have strong political connection­s and they get their cases dropped,” said a former legal counsel of ACB in undivided AP.

When this lawyer, who preferred anonymity, was in service, the ACB sleuths had arrested an IPS official, J.J. Murali, SP of Visakhapat­nam, in connection with a DA case. But the cops could not prove the excessive value of his assets and the government denied them the permission to prosecute him. The IPS official retired in 2012 and the HC struck down the case for want of government permission.

As of now, the AP ACB has sought prosecutio­n of 223 officials in corruption cases, but the government has granted permission only in 157, which are mostly bribery cases.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A woman reacts as ‘Sindur’, or vermillion powder, is applied to her face after worshippin­g an idol of the Goddess Durga on the last day of the Durga Puja festival in Chandigarh on Saturday.
REUTERS A woman reacts as ‘Sindur’, or vermillion powder, is applied to her face after worshippin­g an idol of the Goddess Durga on the last day of the Durga Puja festival in Chandigarh on Saturday.

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