The Free Press Journal

1 kg of 194 kg marijuana tested positive for the drug

- BHAVNA UCHIL |

A special court under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop­ic Substances (NDPS) Act, while granting bail to NCP leader Nawab Malik’s son-inlaw Sameer Khan last month, relied on a chemical analysis report which showed that only over one kg of the 194 kg ‘marijuana’ recovered, tested positive for the drug.

The Narcotics Control Bureau had arrested Khan along with British national Karan Sajnani and celebrity manager Rahila Furniturew­ala and claimed they ran an internatio­nal drug cartel along with others. It was on specific informatio­n the agency had raided a courier firm in Bandra East where Sajnani’s consignmen­t was found to be sent to a person in Shillong. From

Sajnani’s Khar residence, 194 kg marijuana was seized in a search. It was on his statement that Khan was arrested.

In a detailed order made available on Wednesday, the court said that the recovered contraband thus does not come within the ambit of commercial quantity under the NDPS Act. Of the 18 samples which were sent for analysis, 11 had tested negative for cannabis. The court noted that the NCB has not applied for reassessme­nt or reexaminat­ion of the samples. The prosecutio­n had argued that the discrepanc­y in the CA report is part and parcel of the trial and can be scrutinise­d during the trial. The court refused to accept this argument as the report being conclusive speaks in quantum, it said. The CA report places the ascertainm­ent of the quantity of contraband in commercial quantities “under a shadow of doubt”, it said, and added that the active constituen­ts of cannabis and its quantum of 1.199 kg lies within intermedia­te quantities. “Although the prosecutio­n has ascertaine­d cannabis in commercial quantity, it is evident that the CA report having conclusive value propels a different theory,” special judge Dr AA Joglekar said.

The court also said that prima-facie no connivance with the co-accused could be located and nothing except the statements of Khan and his co-accused have been relied on to show his involvemen­t. “Apart from this there is no material to specifical­ly show the role of the applicant,” it said.

Full report on www.freepressj­ournal.in

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