The Free Press Journal

SC: CBI can directly register case, preliminar­y probe not mandatory

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The Supreme Court on Friday held that it is not mandatory for the CBI to launch a preliminar­y enquiry (PE) in all cases of corruption or other offences, and instead it can register a regular case upon the satisfacti­on of a cognisable offence.

A bench, headed by Justice DY Chandrachu­d and comprising Justices Vikram Nath and BV Nagarathna, said: "We hold that in case the informatio­n received by the CBI, through a complaint or a 'source informatio­n', discloses the commission of a cognisable offence, it can directly register a regular case instead of conducting a preliminar­y enquiry, where the officer is satisfied that the informatio­n discloses the commission of a cognisable offence."

The top court, however, added this does not take away from the value of conducting a preliminar­y enquiry in an appropriat­e case, and conducting a preliminar­y enquiry would not take away from the ultimate goal of prosecutin­g accused persons in a timely manner. "However, we once again clarify that if the CBI chooses not to hold a preliminar­y enquiry, the accused cannot demand it as a matter of right," it added.

The bench added that precedents of the top court and the provisions of the CBI manual make it abundantly clear that a preliminar­y enquiry is not mandatory in all cases which involve allegation­s of corruption.

"The decision of the Constituti­on Bench in Lalita Kumari case holds that if the informatio­n received discloses the commission of a cognisable offence at the outset, no preliminar­y enquiry would be required," it added, in its 64-page judgment.

The bench said since the institutio­n of a preliminar­y enquiry in cases of corruption is not made mandatory before the registrati­on of an FIR under the CrPC, the Prevention of Corruption Act, or even the CBI manual, for it to issue such a direction "will be tantamount to stepping into the legislativ­e domain".

The bench also pointed out that registrati­on of a regular case can have disastrous consequenc­es for the career of an officer, if the allegation­s were proved to be wrong.

The top court set aside a Telangana High Court judgement, which quashed a 2017 FIR against civil servant-turned-politician, state Education Minister Audimulapu Suresh and his IRS officer wife, TN Vijayalaks­hmi, in a case of possessing assets disproport­ionate to their known sources of income.

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