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Shocking and sordid: CBI officer's tell-all petition

DSP Bassi, who was probing Asthana, makes explosive charges as he challenges transfer to Andamans

Ajay Kumar Bassi outside the CBI headquarters. PTI

R. Balaji And Imran Ahmed Siddiqui
Published 30.10.18, 09:46 PM

The CBI scandal has lurched into a minefield littered with explosive cans of worms.

A serving officer who was shunted out after the midnight raid has approached the Supreme Court with an explosive petition that lists a threat to his life, the possibility of evidence-tampering and specific, if not damning, charges against Rakesh Asthana, the benched special director considered close to the Prime Minister.

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The officer who has moved the top court is Ajay Kumar Bassi, the CBI deputy superintendent sent to Port Blair hours after the midnight raid that displaced director Alok Verma.

Bassi’s move stands out because he has filed a sworn affidavit levelling the charges — which he has described as “shocking” — putting at stake his career and taking on a senior officer with friends in high places.

A bench of Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi and Justices U.U. Lalit and K.M. Joseph agreed to fix a date for hearing the petition after advocate Sunil Fernandez, appearing for Bassi, sought an early listing.

Some of the charges levelled by Bassi in the petition in relation to a bribery complaint against Asthana are:

The Telegraph could not contact Asthana, Goel and Dagar despite repeated attempts. A CBI spokesperson reserved comment, saying the matter is sub judice.

Bassi’s petition goes beyond the recorded statement of the complainant, Sana, by citing information allegedly thrown up by the investigation before the DSP was taken off the case.

Bassi said he was being targeted by the CBI because before his transfer, he had recorded the statement of Sana who had specifically mentioned that the bribes were taken in Asthana’s name by the alleged conduits, Manoj and Somesh.

Then the specifics are mentioned. “The investigation conducted by the applicant (Bassi) herein revealed that the act of demand and acceptance of illegal gratification primarily pertains to two distinct periods of December 2017 and October 2018. There are two instances of acceptance of bribe in December 2017 totalling to Rs 2.95 crore and three instances of acceptance of bribe in October 2018 totalling to around Rs 36 lakh,” Bassi’s petition to the court said.

The Supreme Court bench directed the Hyderabad superintendent of police to provide protection to Sana. But it rejected Sana’s plea to depose directly before a retired judge who is supervising the probe and told him to appear before the CBI.

The Telegraph

Supreme Court Of India Rakesh Asthana Central Bureau Of Investigation (CBI) Ajay Kumar Bassi
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