Refusing to accept the result of the test conducted by NADA, in which Vijender had tested negative for heroin or any other prohibited substance, the police had approached Fatehgarh Sahib court on April 3 and submitted the application for directing the boxer to furnish samples before the Central Forensic Science Laboratory, Chandigarh.
"After considering the entirety of the facts and circumstances, I am of the view that blood and urine tests have already been examined by NADA. No order can be passed merely on the asking of the investigation agency. As such, the application is dismissed," said Kuldip Singh, special judge, Fatehgarh Sahib, in his judgment.
Vijender, through his counsel, had told the court that due to the police's action, he was being defamed in the media and his boxing career was getting affected.
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But the judge raised doubts about the applicability of this section to Vijender's case.
"At this stage, the evidence against Vijender is the statement of some accused arrested in the case regarding consumption of heroin in the past (December 2012 and February 2013). And no narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances, even in small quantity, were recovered from him," said Kuldip Singh.
Vijender's name had cropped up after the Fatehgarh Sahib police seized heroin from NRI drug dealer Anoop Singh Kahlon's residence in Zirakpur on March 3.
Punjab Police had claimed that Vijender experimented with heroin 12-14 times between December 2012 and February 2013, a charge repeatedly denied by the boxer.