Delhi court extends Manish Sisodia’s ED remand till March 22 in excise case

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Public TV English
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NEW DELHI: The Rouse Avenue Court on Friday extended former Delhi former Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia’s Enforcement Directorate (ED) remand by five more days in a money-laundering case pertaining to alleged irregularities in the framing and implementation of the excise policy of GNCTD.

While seeking further remand of the Aam Aadmi Party (AAP) leader in connection with the excise policy case, the ED told the court that various crucial information is revealed during the custody of Manish Sisodia.

The agency further said that in view of the findings, it has issued summons to the then Excise Commissioner Rahul Singh for March 20 (who was first issued summons for March 15 but had taken adjournment of at least four days as he is suffering from viral infection and fever). Further summons to C Aravind, the then Secretary to the Deputy CM for March 21, Dinesh Arora for March 17; and Amit Arora for March 20 have already been issued, said ED. The findings and persons need to be confronted with Manish Sisodia, said ED.

Special Judge MK Nagpal on Friday extended the ED remand period of Sisodia till March 22, 2023.

Appearing for Sisodia, Senior Advocate Mohit Mathur opposed the remand application of ED and submitted that personal liberty is paramount. “The court is the custodian of our liberty. My liberty is in your hand. During seven days custody, they had only four people to be confronted. Confrontation need not entail custody”, he added.

Appearing for the ED, advocate Zohaib Hossain submitted that huge mail data, mobile data all of that are being forensically analyzed. The mobile phone was changed the day the LG wrote to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), which was used by Sisodia for a long time.

The counsel for ED further submitted that the statements were confirmed by the recovery of the data received from the computer of the arrested. Mobile data, email data, cloud data was also received during the interpretation, ED said.

Earlier, the ED said the act of pro-active destruction of evidence leads to only one inference that Manish Sisodia made conscious efforts to destroy evidence of offence of money laundering, while seeking remand of Manish Sisodia in connection with the excise policy case.

Appearing for ED, Advocates Zohaib Hossain and Naveen Kumar Matta had earlier submitted that even in the statement given by Manish Sisodia on March 7 and 9, he has been untrue. “On being asked about his association with Dinesh Arora, who handled the transfer of kickbacks from the South Group to Vijay Nair, he gave an answer contrary to what has been revealed by independent persons/stakeholders”, ED said.

Sisodia was on Friday presented before the court after the end of his remand period in the case, granted earlier by the same court. The ED earlier also told the court that Manish Sisodia had purchased SIM cards and mobile phones in other people’s names. There was a conspiracy behind framing the excise policy. The conspiracy was coordinated by Vijay Nair, along with others and the Excise policy was brought out for extraordinary profit margin for wholesalers, ED argued in the court.

The ED told the court that the margin of 12 per cent of wholesale profit margin to private entities was never discussed in the GoM meeting. The probe agency had also apprised the court about the meeting between Vijay Nair and Bharat Rashtra Samithi (BRS) MLC K Kavitha.

The ED stated that accused Hyderabad-based chartered accountant Butchibabu Gorantla disclosed a political understanding between then Deputy Chief Minister Manish Sisodia and K Kavitha who also met Vijay Nair. Butchibabu is the former auditor of K Kavitha and is presently on bail. Countering Sisodia’s lawyer’s arguements, the ED lawyer told the court that if the policy is a matter of executive, then there would not be a coal scam or a 2G scam. (ANI)

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