SC comes down heavily on CBI
CBI director Ranjit Sinha's admission that his officers had regular interactions with officials of coal ministry and Prime Minister's Office, incurred the ire of the Supreme Court on Wednesday. Bhadra Sinha reports. Coalgate: who said what | Coal scam: A look back |
CBI director Ranjit Sinha's admission that his officers had regular interactions with officials of coal ministry and Prime Minister's Office, incurred the ire of the Supreme Court on Wednesday.

"Is the job of the CBI to interact or interrogate? Is this a collaborative action going on?" asked a bench headed by Justice RM Lodha.
The court found it strange that even after receiving documents CBI continued its interaction instead of putting interrogatories. "Clarification cannot be sought by word of mouth," the bench said.
"One year has passed since preliminary inquiry was registered. Nothing substantial has happened except for interaction," it added.
The two officers, Shatrughna Singh and AK Bhalla had sought deletion of CBI's tentative finding that there was no system in place to award weightage points to coal block applicants.
Their suggestion to add a line about non-existence of approved guidelines for allocation of coal blocks too was accepted by the CBI.

Explaining the interactions between CBI sleuths and bureaucrats, CBI counsel UU Lalit said the meeting was in connection with the 1.5 lakh pages of documents handed over to the agency.

Solicitor General Mohan Parasaran too said that the meeting was to correct "clerical errors" in the report.
The arguments, however, failed to impress the bench which asked the CBI director to clarify if the two bureaucrats took the status report with them or not.
"They (the joint secretaries) meet the CBI officers on March 6. A day later they come back to the CBI officers and suggest changes. I am sure they don't have such a good memory. The affidavit does not state if they took the draft report with them," said the bench, also comprising Justice Madan B Lokur and Justice Joseph Kurien.
ABOUT THE AUTHORBhadra SinhaBhadra is a legal correspondent and reports Supreme Court proceedings, besides writing on legal issues. A law graduate, Bhadra has extensively covered trial of high-profile criminal cases. She has had a short stint as a crime reporter too.Read More
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