Ahmedabad: The Gujarat High Court has dismissed a revision application filed by sacked IPS officer Sanjiv Bhatt, seeking modification in the charges framed against him in a 1996 case under the Narcotics Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act (NDPS). While dismissing Bhatt's plea on Thursday, Justice Ilesh Vora also directed the trial court to begin the trial proceedings 'expeditiously', observing the process is yet to commence as the former officer kept filing applications in lower courts as well as the high court.
'The trial is yet to commence as of the applicant, under one pretext or the other, filed applications before the trial court as well as before this court. Thus, it is evident that, after framing the charges, the trial court is unable to record the evidence of the witnesses,' Justice Vora in the order. 'No litigation has a right to unlimited drought on the court and public money in order to get his affairs settled in the manner he wishes. However, access to justice should not be misused as a license to file misconceived and frivolous petition,' the judge observed.
Bhatt has been behind bars ever since his arrest by the CID in this case in 2018. uring his judicial custody, he was convicted in a 1990 custodial torture case, while the charges in the 1996 drug possession case were already framed by the trial court in Banaskantha.
Bhatt, a Gujarat cadre IPS officer, who was Banaskantha SP in 1996, was sacked by the Union Ministry of Home Affairs in August 2015 for 'unauthorized absence' from service. It is alleged by the prosecution that when the applicant was posted as District Superintendent of Police, Banaskantha at Palanpur, he hatched a conspiracy to frame one Sumer Singh Rajpurohit, resident of Pali, Rajasthan State, in a false case of opium possession, punishable under the provisions of the NDPS Act.
Banaskantha Police under Bhatt had claimed that 1.5 kg of opium was found in a hotel room occupied by Rajpurohit in Palanpur town. However, a probe by the Rajasthan police had revealed that Rajpurohit was falsely implicated.