The Sunday Guardian

CHANDRABAB­U IN TROUBLE AS KCR REVIVES CASH FOR VOTE CASE

- CONTINUED FROM P1

and TRS president K. Chandrasek­har Rao held a review of its progress with top officials of the police and the ACB at his residence on 7 May. DGP Mahender Reddy, ACB DGP J. Purnachand­ra Rao, former ACB DGP A.K. Khan and Intelligen­ce DGP Naveen Chand were present there.

The discussion was on including Naidu’s name in the third and last charge-sheet which would be submitted in the trial court in Hyderabad next week. This is based on a forensic laboratory report from the Telangana Forensic Laboratory and another forensic laboratory from Chandigarh.

The laboratory reports, according to sources in the ACB, have establishe­d that the voice in the audio tapes was that of Chandrabab­u Naidu. According to the audio tape recorded from the mobile phone of nominated MLA Elvis Stephenson on the night of 31 May 2015, CM Naidu told the lawmaker to take a decision (on supporting his TDP candidate for MLC elections) and confirmed that his men (TDP leaders) briefed him everything.

As the phone call from the AP CM came to Stephenson when another TDP MLA A. Revanth Reddy was present at the latter’s house with a cash bag of Rs 50 lakh, the ACB sleuths who were hiding inside, establishe­d that the money was sent by the CM to buy the nominated MLA’s vote for the TDP candidate.

The entire operation was manned and recorded in CCTV cameras by the ACB as Stephenson had tipped off the police about the offer he had got through some intermedia­ries, including a pastor, Jerusalem Mathaiah, who first informed him about the bribe offer. The ACB sleuths were in another room till Revanth Reddy unzipped the cash bag and took out the currency bundles. They then caught him redhanded.

However, in the chargeshee­ts, CM Naidu was not named as an accused as there was no clinical evidence to show that he could be named. The ACB offi- cials waited for about eight months till they got the forensic reports which confirmed the voice of the AP CM. Even after the reports came, there was no progress in the case due to the changed political situation. By the end of 2015, the two CMs, KCR and Naidu, had ended their hostilitie­s and turned friends and 12 out of the total 15 TDP MLAs had joined TRS and Revanth Reddy joined Congress. At one stage it was thought that the case might be sent to cold storage due to a lack of traction and monitoring at the highest level.

The political atmosphere in both Telangana and Andhra charged up early last week as KCR directed the officials to complete the case at the earliest. Officials later told The Sunday Guardian that the third and the last chargeshee­t would be filed by 18 May and most probably the name of Andhra CM would be included as an accused.

Revanth Reddy is Accused no. 1 in the case and others who helped him contact Stephenson and some intermedia­ries including Mathaiah were mentioned as the other accused. Revanth Reddy, arrested on 31 May 2015, was sent to jail for four months and later he got bail from the High Court. Later, Mathaiah filed a petition in the Supreme Court seeking permission to turn approver in the case.

The Supreme Court had issued notices to the ACB, calling for a counter to the plea. If Mathaiah’s petition is allowed, it might be disadvanta­geous to Naidu and Revanth Reddy. Mathaiah, on Monday, 7 May even called for a CBI probe into the case as it pertained to two states and two CMs. Sources in the ACB indicated that they might not oppose Mathaiah’s petition to turn approver.

Meanwhile, Revanth Reddy, who interacted with the media in Hyderabad on Tuesday, alleged that KCR revived the case against him under the influence of the BJP. “The BJP wants to target the Andhra CM for opposing the Prime Minister. KCR’s decision to file another charge-sheet is nothing but part of this game-plan to settle scores against Naidu and me,” said Revanth Reddy.

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