AAP legislator Somnath Bharti escorted by police to Dwarka court in New Delhi on Tuesday. (Press Trust of India Photo)
New Delhi:
Former Delhi Law minister Somnath Bharti broke down during questioning by investigators, who today took him to his Dwarka residence where he came face to face with his wife in connection with the dowry harassment and attempt to murder case.
The police also added Section 212 of the Indian Penal Code or IPC (harbouring offender) in the First Information Report (FIR) registered against Mr Bharti, and said that so far they have identified five people who allegedly sheltered the legislator while he was on the run.
"We have added Section 212 of IPC in the existing FIR and shall ask the court for an extension of Bharti's police custody at least by a day. We need to take him to all those places where he had taken shelter during the run and make him confront all the persons who had harboured him," said Joint Commissioner of Police (Southwest) Dependra Pathak.
Meanwhile, an official privy to the investigation said that Mr Bharti broke down during his interrogation last night when he was asked specific details about how he used to assault his wife and why he did so.
The police also asked him to clarify the allegation of unleashing his pet dog on his wife, Lipika Mitra. They also asked him about a particular derogatory word which, Ms Mitra had claimed, compelled her to report her ordeal to the police.
Mr Bharti was also confronted with the driver of a Faridabad-based businessman, whose car he had borrowed and later fled from Delhi, said the official.
The driver has recognised Mr Bharti but the former law minister has so far claimed that he had never seen the driver.
In the wee hours today, the policemen took 41-year-old Mr Bharti to the Dwarka apartment where he lived with his wife, to reconstruct events as and when they happened, said the official.
Ms Mitra was present when Mr Bharti was taken there. However, no conversation took place between them during the visit which lasted between 30 to 40 minutes, said the official.
Earlier, police took Ms Bharti to his office at Malviya Nagar and his mother's residence at Vasant Kunj, where his brother Loknath Bharti also lives. Ms Mitra had alleged that she was also assaulted in that house.
However, the police have so far not been able to recover the knife with which Mr Bharti allegedly tried to slit his wife's wrist, said a senior official.
The accused legislator has also not yet been able to produce any of the documents or records - including a series of text messages - which he claimed to have possessed in his defence.
In the evening, the policemen took Mr Bharti's pet dog to a veterinary hospital in south Delhi where the Labrador Retriever is to be examined by an expert in the presence of its master.
"The objective is to examine whether the dog is capable of inflicting the kind of wounds visible near the victim's abdomen. It is also to be checked whether and to what extent it follows its master's command," said the senior official.
The senior official further said that the policemen will also preserve the dental impression of the dog, taking into consideration natural changes in the pattern which naturally occurs in a period of four years, which is again to be ascertained by the expert.
The person who allegedly harboured party legislator Somnath Bharti during the period he evaded arrest was booked for criminal breach of trust in Uttar Pradesh yesterday.
The accused, identified as Baney Singh (50), who the police claims is a local AAP leader at Agra, took Mr Bharti to his distant relative Lal Singh's house at Sakatpur village near Agra when the legislator was on the run, said a senior Delhi Police official.
There Baney Singh, who was accompanied by another associate identified as Nattha Singh, borrowed Lal Singh's Maruti Alto car, telling him that the legislator had to move around the area for some official work and they shall return in a few hours.
But he did not keep his promise, said the official.
"Both Baney Singh and Nattha Singh are now under the police scanner," Joint Commissioner of Police (Southwest) Dependra Pathak added.
By the time Mr Bharti surrendered, the Delhi Police also managed to track the owner of the car in which the legislator was found to be moving around most of the time. When cops approached Lal Singh, it emerged that Mr Singh was cheated by his own relative.
Lal Singh later filed a complaint at Jagdishpur police station in UP and an FIR was registered, said the senior official. However, Somnath Bharti was not named in the FIR.
Mr Bharti was arrested around 4 AM yesterday, hours after he surrendered before the police on the direction of the Supreme Court. He was later presented before a city court, which sent him on two-days police custody.