In a major relief to BSP supremo Ms Mayawati, the Supreme Court today quashed a nine-year-long disproportionate assets case against her and pulled up the CBI for initiating the probe against her without specific directions from the court.

The apex court said that the method adopted by the CBI was “unwarranted” and the agency proceeded against her without properly understanding its orders passed in the Taj Corridor scam.

A Bench headed by Mr Justice P. Sathasivam clarified that the Supreme Court order pertained to initiating probe against state government officials in the scam.

It said that there was no such direction to lodge another FIR exclusively against Ms Mayawati for allegedly amassing assets disproportionate to her known sources of income.

The apex court said there is no finding in the CBI’s status report of September 2008 that Ms Mayawati had allegedly amassed disproportionate assets during the period 1995-2003.

'No material report'

“There is no material report of disproportionate assets case against the petitioner (Mayawati) in the Taj Corridor scam,” the Bench said while referring to the probe agency’s status report.

The court further said that its order of 2002 was specifically pertaining to Taj Corridor case and there was no direction for lodging an FIR against Ms Mayawati as was done by the CBI.

While reading out the operative part of its judgment, the Bench observed there was “no such direction to lodge another FIR under Prevention of Corruption Act exclusively against Mayawati’’.

“The CBI proceeded without properly understanding our orders”, the Bench said, adding, “Method adopted by the CBI is unwarranted.”

The apex court said that the investigating agency exceeded it jurisdiction by filing a disproportionate assets case against the former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister as there was no such direction from it.

“The CBI should have lodged only one FIR (in Taj Corridor scam). There was no direction for lodging second FIR (against Mayawati) by the Supreme Court,” the Bench said.

The court passed the judgment on Ms Mayawati’s plea seeking quashing of proceedings against her in the disproportionate assets case lodged by the CBI.

She had alleged that the agency was being used as a political tool by “fixing” the case against her.

'Act of political vendetta'

Ms Mayawati had approached the apex court in May 2008 seeking quashing of the criminal proceedings against her in the disproportionate assets case lodged by the CBI nine years ago. She had alleged it was an act of political vendetta against her.

The court had reserved its judgment on May 1 this year after hearing both the sides.

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