A division bench comprising acting Chief Justice Nishita Mhatre and Justice T Chakraborti directed the CBI to take possession of all material and devices related to the sting operation within 24 hours and to conclude the preliminary enquiry within another 72 hours.
The court directed the CBI to register FIR, if required, after completion of the preliminary inquiry and initiate formal investigation thereafter.
The Narada sting tapes, which were released to different news organisations before the 2016 Assembly elections in West Bengal, showed some leaders allegedly taking money.
Mathew Samuel, editor of Narada News, had told the court that the recordings were done using an iPhone, which were transferred to a laptop and were then stored in a pendrive.
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All these devices were taken possession of by a committee set up by the high court.
Passing the order, the court observed that conduct of public figures must be beyond reproach.
It said that given the persons against whom allegations have been made are ministers, MPs and other senior leaders from the state, it would be just to direct the CBI, and not a state agency, to conduct a preliminary inquiry.
Three petitions had been filed before the high court seeking independent probe into the sting tapes after examining the genuineness of the recordings.
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