Ashok Chavan, former chief minister of Maharashtra, charge-sheeted in the Adarsh scam, on Wednesday looked set to be let off the hook, with the CBI moving a special court seeking approval to drop his name as an accused in the case following governor's refusal to sanction his prosecution.
Special Public Prosecutor Bharat Badami filed an application before CBI court judge S G Dighe requesting him to allow it to remove Chavan's name from the list of 13 accused charge-sheeted in the case, citing the governor's decision, which it said was "non-appealable".
The court reserved its order on the application for Saturday.
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A judicial commission of inquiry set up by the state government had indicted all three for "blatant violations" of statutory provisions in granting various clearances to the scam-tainted Adarsh housing society.
The judicial panel's report had said, "There was certainly a nexus between the acts of Chavan and benefits derived by his close relatives. The membership process clearly indicates that grant of requisite permission by Chavan was by way of quid pro quo."
Chavan (55), who had to step down as chief minister after the scam surfaced, had challenged his inclusion in the charge sheet on the ground that no sanction for prosecution had been obtained from the governor.
The CBI had maintained that since he was a former chief minister at the time of being charge-sheeted, gubernatorial approval was not required. The court had, however, directed the agency to get sanction for Chavan's prosecution which was denied by Governor K Sankaranarayanan, apparently leaving CBI with little choice but to close the case against him.