Special Judge O P Saini observed that the CBI had started its case with "great enthusiasm and ardour" but at the final stage of the trial, SPP Grover and the regular CBI prosecutor moved in "two different directions without any coordination".
It would be pertinent to mention that at the start of the case, the apex court had appointed senior advocate U U Lalit, now a Supreme Court judge, as the SPP in the 2G case.
"In the beginning, the prosecution started with the case with great enthusiasm and ardour. However, as the case progressed, it became highly cautious and guarded in its attitude making it difficult to find out as to what prosecution wanted to prove," the court said in its 1,552 page verdict in the CBI's case involving former telecom minister A Raja and others.
"However, by the end, the quality of prosecution totally deteriorated and it became directionless and diffident. Not much is required to be written as the things are apparent from the perusal of the evidence itself," the court said.
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The documents were ultimately signed by a an inspector of the agency, who was one of the junior-most officers posted in the court, the judge said.
"When questioned, the reply of the regular senior PP would be that the Spl. PP would sign it and when the Spl. PP was questioned, he would say that CBI people would sign it," the judge noted.
The court further noted that when final arguments in the case started, SPP Grover had said he would file the written submissions but later, he started arguing the matter orally which went on for several months.
"On conclusion of final arguments for the prosecution, he (SPP) did not file written arguments, but instead submitted that he would file it only when the defence would file its written arguments. That was highly unfair," it said.
The court rued the fact that the insistence on filing of CBI's written submissions after accused do the same led to a situation where defence counsel were given extra time to rebut the allegations.
"Not only this, the most painful part is that Spl PP was not ready to sign the written submissions filed by him," the court said, asking, "What is the use of a document in a court of law, which is not signed by anyone? When questioned as to why the Spl. PP was filing unsigned written submissions, his reply would be that some defence advocates had also not signed the written submissions".
"Many more things can be said but that would only add to the length of the order," the court said.