"Its time for the agency to rethink whether its necessary to arrest accused in such cases. These are not conventional crimes like murder. Earlier, CBI used to not arrest in such cases. Its only after the movements like that of the Anna Hazare and some others that arrests are being made in these cases. They are the public servants and the evidences are mostly documentary in nature in such cases," Special CBI Judge Gurdeep Singh observed during the day's proceedings.
Seeking interim bail, advocate Umakant Kataria, who appeared for 59-year-old Bansal, submitted that there was nobody in his family to look after and perform the last rites of his wife and daughter.
"The applicant (Bansal) himself is under shock and his only son is grief stricken and has been stunned to the extent that he is not able to attend the people and is sitting like a statue.
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In its reply to Bansal's application, the probe agency said it had no objection to the interim bail to the accused on "humanitarian grounds".
Bansal's wife Satyabala (58) and daughter Neha (28) allegedly hung themselves from ceiling fans in two separate rooms at their residence in Nilkanth Apartments in east Delhi's Madhu Vihar yesterday.
Both the women left separate suicide notes, saying the CBI raid had caused "great humiliation" and they did not want to live after that. They, however, held nobody responsible for their deaths.