Mumbai:
In an instance of cop-turned-criminal, an Assistant Commissioner of Police was arrested in Worli for allegedly carrying 2 kg of brown sugar in his official police vehicle on Tuesday.
The Mumbai Crime Branch sleuths laid a trap to nab the 'bootlegger-turned-drug trafficker' cop, Ashok Dhawale, along with a local drug peddler Munna, following a tip-off.
The drug is worth approximately Rs 2 crore in the international market, police sources informed. "He had bought the drugs from Jammu and Kashmir and was going to deliver it to a local drug peddler," said Additional Commissioner of Police Devendra Bharti.
In fact, Munna was Dhawale's key informer when the officer himself was attached to the Anti-Narcotics Cell around 1997. The 1981 batch sub-inspector was involved in several drug seizures during his Anti-Narcotics stint.
Cops suspect that Dhawale has been part of an active drug-peddling racket for years now, and has been using his official position to buy drugs at a lesser price.
"He has also been threatening drug peddlers in the city that he will get them arrested," a senior police official revealed on condition of anonymity.
This isn't the first time that Dhawale has been found on the wrong side of the law. If police sources are to be believed, he has been running roughshod over the law for the past decade in various cases.
In 2007, when he was posted at Vikhroli police station, the State Excise Department had arrested Dhawale near Manor for illegally smuggling Indian-made foreign liquor from Daman into the city in his police vehicle. The alcohol was worth a few lakh rupees.
He was dismissed from service under Section 311 of the Bombay Police Acts. But subsequently reinstated a few months ago. Since then, he has held the post of deputy superintendent of police in the Protection of Civil Rights department in the DG office.
On two occasions prior to this, department enquiries had been initiated against him for smuggling drugs. "He has been misusing his power and authority and has also been threatening people," said the anonymous official.
Dhawale is also said to have grabbed land worth several crores in Ghatkopar-Vikhroli-Parksite area in the last few years.
The Mumbai Crime Branch sleuths laid a trap to nab the 'bootlegger-turned-drug trafficker' cop, Ashok Dhawale, along with a local drug peddler Munna, following a tip-off.
The drug is worth approximately Rs 2 crore in the international market, police sources informed. "He had bought the drugs from Jammu and Kashmir and was going to deliver it to a local drug peddler," said Additional Commissioner of Police Devendra Bharti.
In fact, Munna was Dhawale's key informer when the officer himself was attached to the Anti-Narcotics Cell around 1997. The 1981 batch sub-inspector was involved in several drug seizures during his Anti-Narcotics stint.
Cops suspect that Dhawale has been part of an active drug-peddling racket for years now, and has been using his official position to buy drugs at a lesser price.
"He has also been threatening drug peddlers in the city that he will get them arrested," a senior police official revealed on condition of anonymity.
This isn't the first time that Dhawale has been found on the wrong side of the law. If police sources are to be believed, he has been running roughshod over the law for the past decade in various cases.
In 2007, when he was posted at Vikhroli police station, the State Excise Department had arrested Dhawale near Manor for illegally smuggling Indian-made foreign liquor from Daman into the city in his police vehicle. The alcohol was worth a few lakh rupees.
He was dismissed from service under Section 311 of the Bombay Police Acts. But subsequently reinstated a few months ago. Since then, he has held the post of deputy superintendent of police in the Protection of Civil Rights department in the DG office.
On two occasions prior to this, department enquiries had been initiated against him for smuggling drugs. "He has been misusing his power and authority and has also been threatening people," said the anonymous official.
Dhawale is also said to have grabbed land worth several crores in Ghatkopar-Vikhroli-Parksite area in the last few years.
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world