City
Epaper

ED opposes CM Kejriwal's plea seeking more time with lawyer, Delhi court reserves order

By IANS | Updated: April 5, 2024 22:05 IST

New Delhi, April 5 A Delhi court on Friday reserved its order on a plea filed by arrested ...

Open in App

New Delhi, April 5 A Delhi court on Friday reserved its order on a plea filed by arrested Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal seeking permission to spend more time with his legal counsel to prepare for the cases pending against him in several parts of the country.

Special Judge Kaveri Baweja of the Rouse Avenue Court, who heard the matter, has listed the pronouncement of judgment for April 9.

On Monday, the court sent Kejriwal to judicial custody till April 15 in connection with a money laundering case related to the alleged excise policy scam.

In the application filed on Thursday, the Chief Minister claimed that two weekly meetings with his lawyer, as permitted by the court, were insufficient as he faced multiple cases in various states and needed more time for consultations. He urged the court to increase the number of meetings with his lawyer to five per week.

Kejriwal's counsel stressed the multitude of pending cases and argued that the allocated one hour per week for legal consultations was inadequate for understanding and providing instructions.

He also pointed out that Sanjay Singh, another accused, recently granted bail by a trial court on the Supreme Court's instructions, was granted three meetings despite facing fewer cases.

The Enforcement Directorate (ED), however, contested Kejriwal's request for more time with his lawyer, arguing against special privileges being extended to him solely based on his desire to govern from within the jail.

Citing violations of the jail manual, it opposed Kejriwal's request for five weekly meetings with his lawyer, saying that he already enjoyed the privilege of two meetings per week, which deviates from the standard practice of one.

It said that despite Kejriwal's status outside the prison, he must be treated equally within it, without exceptions or special privileges.

The agency also accused Kejriwal of misusing legal interviews for purposes beyond consultation, raising concerns about his governance directives issued from behind bars.

As Kejriwal's counsel argued over the unequal treatment of individuals and the need to balance their rights, the ED maintained that under valid judicial custody, certain rights are curtailed per jail manuals, rejecting the notion of absolute rights for individuals in custody.

The ED arrested Kejriwal on March 21 after questioning him for over two hours at his official residence in Delhi. It has termed the Chief Minister the "kingpin and the key conspirator" of the alleged excise scam in collusion with other ministers of the Delhi government, AAP leaders, and other persons.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalIsrael encouraged by India's support for free maritime navigation: Envoy Azar

NationalIsrael encouraged by India's support for free maritime navigation: Envoy Azar

NationalKarnataka LPG crisis: Minister Muniyappa calls high-level meet, seeks priority supply from Centre

National"I'm sitting at my home in Dubai": Rao Inderjit Yadav, wanted by Haryana Police, denies reports of his arrest

Other SportsIPL 2026: Responsibility was on Miller; that indecision cost Delhi Capitals a couple of points, says Bangar

National Realted Stories

NationalUttar Pradesh leads in crop procurement through GeM portal, Gujarat and Maharashtra follow

NationalHealth audit: Delhi Assembly tells departments to act on panel’s report by July 31

NationalPM Modi vows special probe to identify those facilitating illegal infiltrators in Bengal

NationalBaisakhi pilgrimage: Devotees depart from Delhi for Pakistan visit via Wagah border

NationalAgencies of Home, Finance Ministries sign MoU to curb cyber, financial frauds