Narcotics Control Bureau officer Sameer Wankhede is probing the Aryan Khan case. (File)
Mumbai: The Narcotic Control Bureau's (NCB) Deputy Director General-northern region, Gyaneshwar Singh, today said they have started recording the statement of the agency's Mumbai zonal director Sameer Wankhede in connection with the departmental vigilance probe into allegations of extortion in the drugs-on-cruise case.
A five-member vigilance probe team, which landed in Mumbai in the morning, has started its probe and collected some documents and recordings from the NCB office at Ballard Estate in south Mumbai, Deputy Director General (DDG) Singh, who is heading the departmental vigilance probe into allegations of extortion, told media persons.
"All the material witnesses in the probe will be called to record their statements, I will not take name of any individual," Mr Singh said.
However, the official later said, "The statement of Wankhede is being recorded... it is a sensitive inquiry and it is not possible to share real-time information related to the probe, and we will not be able to share all the details."
"We have started our investigation and are calling witnesses to record their statements," Mr Singh said. "We will definitely speak to Wankhede in connection with the inquiry and others also," he added.
Asked if Sameer Wankhede will continue to probe the cruise drugs seizure case, Mr Singh said he will not make any comments related to the investigation in that case as he is not directly connected to it.
The official said he is in Mumbai for a vigilance inquiry.
The NCB has ordered a vigilance inquiry into the claims made by a witness, Prabhakar Sail, in the cruise drugs case of an extortion bid of Rs 25 crore by some agency officials, including its Mumbai zonal director Sameer Wankhede, to let off Aryan Khan, the son of Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan.
The inquiry is being conducted by Gyaneshwar Singh, who is also the chief vigilance officer of the federal anti-narcotics agency.
A large number of media persons were present outside the NCB's office when Mr Singh arrived.
Sameer Wankhede, who is leading the probe in the cruise drugs case, visited the NCB's headquarters in New Delhi on Tuesday and spent over two hours.
Sources earlier said the inquiry will also look at the aspect of KP Gosavi, another NCB independent witness in the case, being in close proximity of Aryan Khan after the raids, and the procedures followed by the sleuths while entrusting custody of all the accused arrested on October 3 from the international cruise terminal in Mumbai.
Photos and videos of Gosavi with Aryan Khan have gone viral on social media and other news platforms.
The role of all the officers and witnesses involved in the case will be probed and it will be recorded if they followed the NCB manual and procedures mentioned in the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act during such operations, they said.
Sameer Wankhede on Sunday wrote to Mumbai Police commissioner Hemant Nagrale, seeking protection from likely legal action "being planned" against him by unknown persons to falsely frame him concerning an alleged vigilance-related issue.
On Monday, he failed to get any relief related to an affidavit on the sensational extortion claims made by Sail, with a special court saying it cannot pass a blanket order barring courts from taking cognisance of the document.
(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)