New Delhi, Aug 1: A Delhi court Thursday denied anticipatory bail to former IAS probationer Puja Khedkar, who has been accused of cheating and wrongly availing of OBC and disability quota benefits, saying these are serious allegations that “require a thorough investigation”.
“Custodial interrogation of the accused is required to unearth the whole conspiracy and to establish involvement of the other persons involved in conspiracy,” Additional Sessions Judge Devender Kumar Jangala said.
Khedkar, who has not been arrested in the case, had approached the court through her lawyer, saying she faces “immediate threat of arrest”.
Hearing the plea, the judge said the case is “only the tip of the iceberg”, and asked the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) to have a relook at its recommendations made in the recent past and the Delhi Police to widen its scope of investigation.
He said the UPSC is required to find out candidates who might have illegally availed of attempts beyond permissible limits, obtained benefits of OBC (non-creamy layer) and Persons with Benchmark Disability quota despite being not entitled.
The judge directed the Delhi Police to conduct its investigation “in all fairness” to find out candidates recommended in recent past who might have illegally availed of such benefits.
The judge further directed the police to find out whether some insider from the UPSC also helped Khedkar.
In order to maintain its reputation, fairness, sanctity and the faith of aspirants and the general public, there is need on the part of the UPSC to strengthen its SOP (standard operating procedure) to ensure that such an event does not occur in future, the judge said.
The judge made the observation while noting that the officers appointed by the UPSC are the backbone of the country and “the faith of the society at large shall be lost if a thorough investigation to find out the truth is not conducted”.
“The applicant has been able to breach the wall of the UPSC not only once but repeatedly with deceitful means. The faith of the society at large shall be lost if a thorough investigation to find out the truth is not conducted. The accused has not only cheated and defrauded the UPSC but the lawful rights of eligible aspirant with benchmark disability aspirants have been snatched by the accused,” the judge said.
The judge said the UPSC was required to maintain the highest degree of transparency and fairness in its standard operating procedure.
“It is an admitted case of the complainant also that its SOP has been breached by the accused, therefore, the complainant should introspect because its scrutiny system has failed to curb the breach’. The present case may be only the tip of the iceberg because if the applicant/accused can breach the scrutiny system of the complainant, why not others,” the judge said.
While denying anticipatory bail to Khedkar, the judge said the documents placed on record by her itself showed her “guilty mind” and the presence of mens rea (criminal intent).




