Tushar Mehta is new Special Public Prosecutor for 2G case

| Feb 10, 2018, 21:00 IST

Highlights

  • A government order said Mehta has been named to conduct "prosecution appeals/ revisions or other proceedings arising out of the cases related to 2G spectrum investigated by the CBI.
  • On December 21 last year, a special CBI court acquitted all the accused in the 2G scam, including former telecom minister A Raja and DMK MP Kanimozhi.
Tushar Mehta. (File photo)Tushar Mehta. (File photo)
NEW DELHI: The central government has named Additional Solicitor General Tushar Mehta as the Special Public Prosecutor for the 2G Spectrum Scam case to file an appeal against the acquittal of the accused by a trial court in December last year.
A government order said Mehta has been named to conduct "prosecution appeals/ revisions or other proceedings arising out of the cases related to 2G spectrum investigated by the CBI.

On December 21 last year, a special CBI court acquitted all the accused in the 2G scam, including former telecom minister A Raja and DMK MP Kanimozhi.

After the judgement, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) said it would appeal in the high court against the acquittal.

"We said on the day of the judgement that we will appeal in the higher courts. And a call will be taken soon," CBI spokesperson Abhishek Dayal told IANS.

This is not the first time that the CBI has replaced prosecutors in the case. Senior Prosecutor K K Goel argued the case in its initial days but he was replaced by A K Singh.

Singh was dropped after he was allegedly heard in a telephonic conversation advising one of the accused how to fight the case. Goel then returned. The appointment of Special Public Prosecutor U.U. Lalit as a judge of the Supreme Court made way for Senior advocate Anand Grover to replace him in September 2014.


Mehta has now replaced Grover.


The alleged scandal rocked the UPA government led by then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in 2011, majorly costing the Congress-led alliance in the 2014 Lok Sabha elections.


The so-called scam hit the headlines after the Comptroller and Auditor General led by Vinod Rai in an audit report alleged that Raja sold spectrum and telecom licenses to private firms at throwaway prices, causing a notional loss of Rs 1.76 lakh crore to the exchequer.



Get latest news & live updates on the go on your pc with News App. Download The Times of India news app for your device. Read more India news in English and other languages.

From the Web

More From The Times of India

From around the web

Fun times. All day. Every day.

Chuck E Cheese's

No Time for the Gym? This In-Home Machine is All You Need

Bowflex

FC Barcelona & Georgetown Are Teaming up in a Big Way

Georgetown University

More from The Times of India

Varun Dhawan spotted on a dinner date with Natasha Dalal

Bollywood celebs praise Akshay Kumar's 'PadMan'

2018 ICC Under-19 WC final: India U-19s road to the final