City
Epaper

Sameer Wankhede to remain investigating officer in drugs-on-cruise ship case until substantial proof found against him: NCB Deputy Director General

By ANI | Updated: October 27, 2021 21:05 IST

Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) Zonal Director Sameer Wankhede will remain the investigating officer in the drugs-on-cruise ship case until substantial information is found against him, the agency's Deputy Director General (Northern Region) Gyaneshwar Singh said on Wednesday.

Open in App

Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) Zonal Director Sameer Wankhede will remain the investigating officer in the drugs-on-cruise ship case until substantial information is found against him, the agency's Deputy Director General (Northern Region) Gyaneshwar Singh said on Wednesday.

An NCB team, led by Gyaneshwar Singh, is in Mumbai to probe allegations of corruption levelled by Prabhakar Sail, a witness in the drugs-on-cruise case.

Sameer Wankhede was questioned for about four hours on Wednesday as part of the investigation and he put forward "many facts before the team".

Gyaneshwar Singh said a five-member inquiry team of NCB on Wednesday started an investigation into allegations levelled by Prabhakar Sail through an affidavit.

"We requested the Southwest region office to get notice served to key witnesses KV Gosavi and Sail but they could not be contacted. Through media, I request them to join the investigation and give evidence before the special enquiry team which is camping at CRPF mess in Bandra, Mumbai," Singh said.

"Sameer Wankhede was questioned today for about four hours. He put forward many facts before the team. If necessary, more evidence and documents will be sought from him. He submitted case related documents that were sought. If needed, he will be questioned further. He will remain the investigating officer in the drugs-on-cruise ship case until substantial information is found against him," Singh added.

Sail, a bodyguard of NCB witness Kiran Gosavi, had alleged that Gosavi took Rs 50 lakh from an individual after the raid at the cruise ship. Gosavi has denied the allegations.

NCB named Sail as a "hostile witness" in its affidavit in the court on Monday.

Earlier today, Mumbai Police appointed an ACP-level officer to investigate the allegations levelled against Sameer Wankhede.

"All the complaints received against Wankhede will be probed by the officer. Four Police stations in Mumbai have received such complaints so far," Mumbai Police said.

An NCB team busted an alleged drugs party on the Cordelia Cruise ship which was on its way to Goa on October 2.

A total of 20 people including Aryan Khan, son of Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan, have been arrested in the case.

( With inputs from ANI )

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

Tags: crpfNarcotics Control BureauSameer wankhedeGyaneshwar singhNarcotics bureau
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiMumbai: NCB Mumbai Destroys 1.8 Tonnes of Mephedrone, 341 kg Other Seized Drugs in Major Pre-Trial Disposal Operation

EntertainmentThe Ba**ds of Bollywood: Did Aryan Khan Troll Sameer Wankhede in His Netflix Series? Here's What Netizens Say

MumbaiMumbai Maratha Morcha: Traffic Chaos Near CSMT Railway Station as Protesters Block Roads; CISF, CRPF Deployed

NationalPunjab: Building Collapses Shortly After Indian Army Airlifts 22 CRPF Personnel, Civilians Near Madhopur Headworks (Watch)

NationalHaryana Crime: 29-Year Old CRPF Officer Shot Dead in Sonepat Village After Altercation During Kanwar Yatra

National Realted Stories

NationalJharkhand Guv, CM Hemant Soren lead tributes at Birsa Munda’s birthplace on 150th birth anniversary

NationalVijay urges TN voters to stay vigilant, calls voting ‘ultimate weapon of democracy’

NationalCPI(M) to move SC against SIR, Kerala govt cites 'administrative paralysis' risk

NationalTribal Pride Day: Woman Cricketer Kranti Gaud receives Rs 1 crore cheque from MP CM

NationalECI clarifies 3 lakh rise in Bihar voter count after Congress flags discrepancy