New Delhi: CBI commenced arguments afresh in the Delhi High Court on Thursday in its appeal against the acquittal of former telecom minister A Raja and others in the 2G spectrum allocation scam case.
However, the arguments via video conferencing before Justice Yogesh Khanna had to be stopped after only a brief hearing due to connectivity issues.
During the brief proceedings, advocate Vijay Aggarwal, appearing for some of the acquitted persons, told the high court that around 6,500 pages containing the final arguments of the accused and the CBI before the trial court were not found in the digital records supplied to him.
The hearing will continue on Friday.
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), which had earlier concluded its submissions on the issue of ''leave to appeal'', had to start arguing afresh due to change of judge.
Leave to appeal is formal permission granted by a court to a party to challenge a decision in a higher court.
Earlier, the case was being heard on a day-to-day basis by Justice Brijesh Sethi, who retired on November 30 last year and had released the matter from his board on November 23, 2020, owing to the paucity of time.
Before demitting the office, Justice Sethi had decided various petitions and applications filed by the acquitted individuals and firms in the three cases, arising out of the 2G scam probe, lodged by CBI and ED.
After finishing submissions in the CBI's main case, the high court will take up the ED''s money laundering case in which also all the accused were acquitted by the special court.