Excise case: SC to deliver verdict on 13 Sept on Kejriwal's bail plea
As per the cause list of 13 September uploaded on the apex court website, a bench headed by Justice Surya Kant is slated to pronounce the verdict
PTI
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Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal
New Delhi, 12 Sept
The Supreme Court is scheduled to deliver on Friday its
verdict on Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's petitions seeking bail and
challenging his arrest by the CBI in the excise policy 'scam'.
As per the cause list of 13 September uploaded on the apex
court website, a bench headed by Justice Surya Kant is slated to pronounce the
verdict. The bench, also comprising Justice Ujjal Bhuyan, had on 5 September reserved
its verdict on the pleas.
Kejriwal has filed two separate petitions challenging the
denial of bail and against his arrest by the CBI in the corruption case filed
by the central agency. The AAP chief was arrested by the Central Bureau of
Investigation (CBI) on 26 June.
He has challenged in the apex court the Delhi High Court's 5
August order which upheld his arrest in the corruption case. The high court had
noted that the loop of evidence against Kejriwal got closed after collection of
relevant evidence following his arrest by the CBI and it cannot be said that it
was without any justifiable reason or illegal.
The high court had also granted him liberty to approach a
trial court with his plea seeking bail in the case.
The matter relates to alleged corruption in the formulation
and execution of the Delhi government's excise policy for 2021-22, which has
now been scrapped.
The Enforcement Directorate (ED) has also lodged a separate
money laundering case linked to the alleged excise policy 'scam'.
According to the CBI and the ED, irregularities were
committed while modifying the excise policy and undue favours extended to
licence holders. On 12 July, the apex court had granted interim bail to
Kejriwal in the money laundering case.
The top court had referred to a larger bench, preferably of
five judges, for in-depth consideration of three questions on the aspect of
"need and necessity of arrest" under the Prevention of Money
Laundering Act (PMLA).
The ED had on 21 March arrested Kejriwal in connection with
the money laundering case.
During the arguments on 5 September on Kejriwal’s plea in
the corruption case, the chief minister had vehemently opposed in the apex
court the CBI's contentions that he should have approached the trial court
first for bail in the corruption case.
Questioning the maintainability of Kejriwal's pleas,
Additional Solicitor General SV Raju, appearing for the CBI, had submitted that
even in the money laundering case in which he had challenged his arrest by the
ED, he was sent back by the apex court to the trial court.
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