Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Complainan­t

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against them has not been completed. The woman’s husband was suspended for allegedly calling the CJI’S office, and the brother-in-law for allegedly concealing a 2015 police complaint against him over unruly behaviour.

The reinstatem­ent orders came after an earlier meeting with the same top government functionar­y, HT has learnt. The complainan­t and her lawyers were not available for comment.

The complainan­t was transferre­d out of the CJI’S home office on October 22 and was posted in the Centre for Research and Planning. On November 16, her seat was changed to the Admn Material section.

The complainan­t applied for leave on November 17, to attend a function in the school of her eight-year-old daughter, but was advised to work after the function. “Since the school function went on till 12.15 pm, I could not report to work, it being a Saturday and hence half day. I however kept updating my supervisor regarding the delay at my child’s school and inability to attend work on that day,” she said in the affidavit.

Disciplina­ry action was initiated soon after: she was issued a memorandum on November 19, telling her that she had rendered herself liable for action under the provisions of the Conduct Rules. She replied three days later to state that she had applied for casual leave. On the same day, she was transferre­d once again, this time to the Library Division.

The complainan­t was served with a suspension order on November 27 and informed that disciplina­ry proceeding­s were being contemplat­ed against her.

An inquiry was initiated against the complainan­t under the Supreme Court Officers and Servants (Condition of Service and Conduct) Rules, 1961, for “questionin­g the decision of senior officers and thereby acting in a manner prejudicia­l to discipline,” and for “unauthoris­edly absenting herself from duty on November 17.”

The employee denied all charges in her reply on December 6. She was to appear before the inquiry committee on December 17 but fainted outside the inquiry room. A report from Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital of the same day was annexed to the affidavit the complainan­t sent to the 22 Supreme Court judges. The medical report confirmed that she was “brought unconsciou­s” to the hospital by the court staff.

The very next day, the complainan­t received a communicat­ion from the Registrar, Admn, that the department­al enquiry, which was conducted in her absence, found there was merit in the charges levelled against her.

The complainan­t was dismissed from service on December 21.

According to a member of her legal team, “the charges against her are not grave and do not warrant dismissal from service.”

When the news first broke in April, Gogoi alleged a conspiracy. “This is unbelievab­le. I should not stoop low even in denying it… There has to be a bigger, bigger force behind this,” he said after the complainan­t’s affidavit was made public.

The Supreme Court set up a committee headed by former judge AK Patnaik, to probe the conspiracy angle, but the status of this panel’s investigat­ion isn’t known. Another committee, comprising three sitting judges of the apex court, found no merit in the complainan­t’s allegation­s. The findings were neither made public nor shared with the complainan­t, who walked out of the panel’s proceeding­s.

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