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Hiten
Dalal surrenders before special court
Our
Markets Bureau
Mumbai, Aug 8: Hiten Dalal finally surrendered before
a special court on Wednesday after he was refused more time
and was taken to custody immediately thereafter. Thus, almost
10 years after the stocks scam rocked the country in 1992,
Dalal, the prime accused in the Rs 78-crore Standard Chartered
Bank fraud case was finally convicted on Wednesday.
Dalal, thus, becomes the first broker to undergo conviction
in cases concerning the multi-crore scam which rocked the
stock exchanges across the country 10 years ago. The Supreme
Court had earlier upheld the one-year sentence imposed on
Dalal by a special court.
According to sources, some action is foreseen on the front
of the securities scam in the days to come as the special
court is expected to speed up the matter. Some more accused
including the prime accused Harshad Mehta is planning to move
the Supreme Court in connection with the earlier judgment
of special court.
Rejecting Dalal’s plea for more time to surrender, Justice
DK Trivedi ordered police to take him into custody but allowed
the broker to remain in the court till 4.45 PM to attend another
scam case in which he is facing trial.
On July 25 this year, the special court had granted him time
to surrender before till today (Wednesday). Dalal appeared
before the judge this morning and his counsel RD Ovelekar
moved an application seeking more time to surrender on grounds
that he was facing trial in another case.
The court was also informed that Dalal had filed a petition
in the apex court seeking review of the earlier Supreme Court
judgement which had upheld his conviction. Since the review
petition was not notified, he may be allowed some more time
to surrender, Dalal pleaded through his counsel.
Public prosecutor Kiran Kapoor opposed Dalal’s plea on the
ground that although there was no provision in criminal procedure
code (CRPC), the court had taken a lenient view on the last
occasion by deferring his arrest by two weeks.
Justice Trivedi held that the court could seek production
of Dalal in other scam cases whenever it was necessary and
there was no need to defer his arrest. Dalal had moved the
special court on July 24 seeking two weeks’ time to surrender
in view of the Supreme Court confirming his conviction in
a case relating to the securities scam of 1991.
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