CBI on Tuesday questioned Vikramaditya Singh, son of Himachal Pradesh Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh, in a case of alleged disproportionate assets.
CBI sources said Singh appeared before the probe team this morning and was questioned.
During his questioning in connection with the case earlier this month, Virbhadra Singh had put the onus of explaining the assets of his wife and children on them, they claimed.
More From This Section
The sources said the probe team has questioned Vikramaditya on the difference in the claims made by Virbhadra and him.
"CBI has a strong case against Virbhadra Singh, his associates and partners regarding the assets acquired in the name of his wife and children," an agency official had said after the Chief Minister was questioned on June 9 and 10.
The agency had initiated an inquiry which had allegedly showed that Virbhadra Singh while serving as a Union minister between 2009-2012 in the UPA government, had accumulated assets worth Rs 6.03 crore (approx) in his name and in the name of his family members which were found to be disproportionate to his known sources of income, CBI has said.
The FIR filed in a designated court in Delhi under the Prevention of Corruption Act, named Singh, his wife Pratibha Singh, LIC agent Anand Chauhan and owner of Universal Apple Associates Limited Chunni Lal Chauhan as accused.
The allegations have been strongly refuted by Singh.
In a statement, a CBI spokesperson had alleged that Singh had invested his unaccounted income in LIC policies in his name and in the name of his wife and other family members through a private person by showing the same as agricultural income.
"This was done by creation of MoU purportedly dated June 15, 2008 for maintenance of an apple orchard, with the said private person (Chauhan) for a period of three years. The private person had allegedly deposited Rs five crore cash (approx) in his own bank account and debited the same through cheques for purchasing various LIC policies in their names," CBI had said.
It had said Singh allegedly attempted to legitimise the same as agricultural income by filing revised Income Tax Returns in 2012.
"The agricultural income as claimed by him in his revised ITRs was not found to be tenable. The then Union Minister had allegedly accumulated other assets disproportionate to known sources of income," CBI has alleged.