CBI’s figures only on paper, no money trail flound: Sisodia tells Delhi HC

On April 5, Sisodia had moved the high court challenging the March 31 order of CBI Judge M.K. Nagpal (Rouse Avenue Court) dismissing his bail plea

By :  IANS
Update: 2023-04-20 15:35 GMT
After hearing the matter at length, the court listed the case for next hearing on April 26.

NEW DELHI: Former Deputy Chief Minister of Delhi, Manish Sisodia, told the Delhi High Court on Thursday that the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has no evidence to show his involvement in the alleged Delhi excise policy case, and that he is being singled out so that he could be kept in jail.

On April 5, Sisodia had moved the high court challenging the March 31 order of CBI Judge M.K. Nagpal (Rouse Avenue Court) dismissing his bail plea.

Senior advocate Dayan Krishnan, appearing for the AAP leader, submitted before the bench of Justice Dinesh Kumar Sharma that all the other accused in the CBI case have been released on bail except Sisodia.

He also said that the probe agency has no proof to show that the AAP leader has tampered with evidence.

"They say that I do not cooperate. This can never be the ground to deny me bail. I am not required to cooperate, confess, or answer questions in the way they want. I am required to answer in the way I want, that is the Constitutional guarantee," Krishnan argued on behalf of Sisodia.

Another counsel for Sisodia, senior advocate Mohit Mathur, said that CBI's figures are just on paper and no money trail has been found.

"They have made me the chief architect of this alleged conspiracy through Vijay Nair. But Vijay Nair was arrested in September 2022 and was released in November, even before the charge sheet was filed. I was only called for questioning for the second time in February 2023. So, all these allegations about me being capable of influencing the witnesses is totally wrong," Mathur contended on behalf of Sisodia.

After hearing the matter at length, the court listed the case for next hearing on April 26.

Additional Solicitor General (ASG) S.V. Raju, the CBI counsel, will make his submissions the next time.

Justice Sharma also asked the ASG to explain to him how the excise policy is run and that the probe agency can call its investigating officer to explain him the same.

While denying Sisodia bail, CBI Judge Nagpal had said that Sisodia can, prima facie, be held to be the "architect of the criminal conspiracy".

He had observed that the payment of advance kickbacks of around Rs 90-100 crore was meant for Sisodia and his colleagues in the AAP government.

The court is not inclined to release Sisodia on bail at this stage of the investigation as his release may adversely affect the ongoing probe and will also seriously hamper its progress, the order had stated.

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