Saturday, May 18, 2013

Compromised Bureau of Investigation


Court Vows To Make CBI Truly Free

Dhananjay Mahapatra TNN 


New Delhi: The Supreme Court ripped apart the myth of CBI’s autonomy on Tuesday by exposing it as being under the thumb of the government of the day. The apex court tore into the government for seeking to vet the CBI’s status report to the SC on the Coalgate scam and subvert it.
    The apex court didn’t mince words while saying that the government’s attempt to change the investigation status report and the CBI’s attempt to mislead the court on whether it had shared the report with anyone was tantamount to “a vital erosion of trust”. 

    A three-member bench, comprising Justices R M Lodha, Madan Lokur and Kurian Joseph, questioned the legal authority of law minister Ashwani Kumar and PMO and coal ministry officials to summon the draft CBI investigation status report.
    It said that the action of the minister and the PMO and the coal ministry has “shaken” the very foundation of an independent probe – an admonition which challenged the minister’s argument that he was entitled to go through the contents of the status report.
    The stinging observations which peppered the much-awaited hearing in the 
politically-charged case also put the spotlight on the CBI’s autonomy with the SC vowing to free the investigating agency from any political and bureaucratic interference.
    The bench said it would remain engaged with the case and would go into who all tampered the status re
port and for the benefit of whom. “If we find that the investigation has been influenced by someone who had no business to do so then the necessary inference is that the investigation is a farce. The case will then have to be investigated by either a Special Investigation Team (SIT) or some other method. Something will have to be done if it was done to shield someone. If that is found to be true, then it is very serious and the reaction will be very different,” it said.
    The court also told CBI director Ranjit Sinha to file an affidavit by Monday disclosing who made what changes at whose instance in the draft 
report and name the persons in addition to the law minister and officials who perused the draft report prior to its filing in the Supreme Court on March 8.
    The court also asked the CBI to stop moving on the “crutches of the executive”. 
JUSTICE BETRAYED SO SAID THE JUDGES 
    First thing we have to do
    is to liberate (CBI) from political interference, liberate it from external infl uence, interference and intrusion. This is the primary task now
The cloud of suspicion over CBI’s impartiality must be lifted. Place before us the CVs of all offi cers… we have to ensure that they are of impeccable integrity
In this case there are serious allegations against political functionaries…where is the occasion for the CBI to share the status report with others? Does this not result in erosion of the trust reposed on you by the court?
Show us from any law which authorized a minister to summon probe status report prior to its submission to the court in a case which is being scrutinized judicially 
SC’S QUERIES Why didn’t CBI disclose to the SC that draft report was shared with political executive? Why did ASG Raval say the report hasn’t been shared with anyone and it is meant for the court alone? Now that CBI says the status report was shared with the law minister and with PMO, what changes were made and at whose instance? Who are the 2 officials in PMO and coal ministry who had sought the report? What’s the procedure being followed by the CBI on sharing the status report with regard to ongoing investigations that are called for by the court? WHAT DOES IT MEAN 
Huge embarrassment for government. Ashwani Kumar (pic) may not step down right away, but cost of retaining him as law minister gets very high. Even PM is likely to feel heat as report was shared with PMO 

Court might walk the talk and set agenda for CBI’s autonomy. Judicial oversight on Coalgate very likely now 

Big blow to attorney-general Vahanvati. ASG Raval has already bowed out
Gloves off. Cong-BJP communications have snapped. Passage of land acquisition and food security bills bleak. Govt might have to bring ordinance on them 
Raval quits, is Coalgate’s first casualty 
    Additional solicitor general Harin Raval quit on Tuesday, hours after the Supreme Court tore into CBI for misleading it. Raval had triggered the latest controversy in the Coalgate episode by giving the apex court a false assurance on March 12 that CBI’s probe status report was not shared with the political executive. With the court taking exception to his misleading statement and his launching a sudden vitriolic attack on attorney general G E Vahanvati, Raval’s place among the country’s law officers became untenable — both on propriety and politically. P11 
Why did ASG lie to court, asks SC 
New Delhi: The bench wanted to know why and on whose instructions additional solicitor general (ASG) Harin Raval had lied to the court on March 12 that the probe status report was not shared with the political executive. It said if it had not nailed the lie by asking the CBI director to endorse the ASG’s statement, things would have been pushed under the carpet.
    It questioned the CBI’s pliancy in rushing to the political executive and bureaucrats with draft status report and asked: “Show us from the CBI Manual or any law which authorizes a minister to summon probe status report prior to its submission to the court in a case which is pending judicial scrutiny.”
    The bench said Raval’s lie has shifted the judicial focus on the coal scam and now its primary task was to make the CBI independent of political interference in letter and spirit and ensure it was free of all “external influence, intrusion and considerations”.
    On the CBI showing the draft report to law minister, the bench gave a dressing down to CBI and said: “Maybe somebody desired something but as investigating agency you know your role. You are the master of investigation and while investigating a matter, you have no masters be it for good or bad reasons.”
    “Does this not vitally erode the trust the court had reposed in the CBI? Are you not guided by the criminal procedure code? This (sharing of the probe status report with political executive) has
shaken the very foundation of the investigation. This is a premier investigating agency and it has to do something that enhances its impartiality, credibility and independence,” the court said.
    It asked CBI’s new counsel, senior advocate U U Lalit, AG G E Vahanvati, and advocate for petitioners, Prashant Bhushan and M L Sharma, to suggest methods to insulate the CBI from every kind of interference.
    When Lalit wanted to hand over a note detailing the changes made in the draft report, the court said it would no longer take notes on this issue after being misled by the law officer during the earlier hearing. The bench asked the director to file an affidavit detailing the changes made in the draft report by the political executive.

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