New Delhi: The Delhi High Court today quashed a trial court order directing the Central Bureau of Investigation or CBI to return documents seized during raids at Delhi Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal's Principal Secretary Rajendra Kumar's office on December 15, 2015, saying it contained self-contradictory reasons.
A bench of Justice PS Teji, while allowing the appeal of the CBI, said that the trial court exceeded in its jurisdiction and the order had self-contradictory reasons.
"The appeal is allowed. The trial court order stands quashed," the bench said.
On February 1, the CBI had submitted before the High Court that the seized documents do not paralyse the functioning of the AAP government, as alleged.
It had said that at the "initial stage of investigation relevancy of the documents cannot be disclosed even if known to the probe agency, as it can do harm to the ongoing investigation".
Opposing the trial court's finding, Additional Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for the CBI, had said that the documents in its possession will "not hamper their (the Delhi government) functioning and it cannot be said that these are unrelated documents" and "the order has completely demoralized the investigating agency".
The Delhi government had countered the CBI's contention, saying the "agency has picked up documents which have nothing to do with the investigation and it is hampering the government's functioning".
The agency had contended that the Special CBI Judge had failed to appreciate that the Delhi government has already obtained photocopies of the documents seized and thus the order of returning the documents was "wholly misconceived".
The CBI had raided office of Mr Kumar on December 15, last year and registered a corruption case against him and others alleging that he had abused his official position by "favouring a particular firm in the last few years in getting tenders from a Delhi government department".
A bench of Justice PS Teji, while allowing the appeal of the CBI, said that the trial court exceeded in its jurisdiction and the order had self-contradictory reasons.
"The appeal is allowed. The trial court order stands quashed," the bench said.
It had said that at the "initial stage of investigation relevancy of the documents cannot be disclosed even if known to the probe agency, as it can do harm to the ongoing investigation".
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The Delhi government had countered the CBI's contention, saying the "agency has picked up documents which have nothing to do with the investigation and it is hampering the government's functioning".
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The CBI had raided office of Mr Kumar on December 15, last year and registered a corruption case against him and others alleging that he had abused his official position by "favouring a particular firm in the last few years in getting tenders from a Delhi government department".
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