Cops helping Star Hero to escape Jail Term
Former IPS Officer-turned-Lawyer YP Singh accused Mumbai police of conspiring with Bollywood star Salman Khan to delay the actor's trail of 'hit-and-run' case.
YP Singh alleged that the investigation team has done everything possible to ensure that the trail progresses slowly which eventually benefits the actor. He also demanded a high-level probe by the Maharashtra government into Salman's case. "Though the court has ordered to produce 34 witnesses before it, the cops didn't send summons to 24 of them and later informed to the court that some of them couldn't be traced and the others didn't accept the summons. So the end result is, only one witness appeared before the court. The cops had done everything deliberately and money has been exchanged for doing so," he complained.
In September 28 2002, Salman Khan rammed his car into a bakery in Suburban Bandra killing one and injuring four people. Cases were booked against the actor under sections 304A (rash and negligent driving), 279 (rash driving), 337 (causing minor injuries), 338 (causing major injuries) and 427 (negligence) of Motor Vehicle Act.
YP Singh alleged that the investigation team has done everything possible to ensure that the trail progresses slowly which eventually benefits the actor. He also demanded a high-level probe by the Maharashtra government into Salman's case. "Though the court has ordered to produce 34 witnesses before it, the cops didn't send summons to 24 of them and later informed to the court that some of them couldn't be traced and the others didn't accept the summons. So the end result is, only one witness appeared before the court. The cops had done everything deliberately and money has been exchanged for doing so," he complained.
In September 28 2002, Salman Khan rammed his car into a bakery in Suburban Bandra killing one and injuring four people. Cases were booked against the actor under sections 304A (rash and negligent driving), 279 (rash driving), 337 (causing minor injuries), 338 (causing major injuries) and 427 (negligence) of Motor Vehicle Act.
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