For the Delhi excise policy case, Arvind Kejriwal was placed under three days of CBI custody

The CBI claimed in the motion that was submitted to the court that Kejriwal needed to be questioned in order to uncover the “larger conspiracy” in the case.Chief Minister Arvind Kejriwal was placed under three days of CBI custody by a Delhi court on Wednesday, just hours after the agency had detained him in relation to an investigation into money laundering involving an excise policy that has since been abolished.

Amitabh Rawat, the vacation judge at Rouse Avenue court, issued an order for Kejriwal to appear before the court by 7:00 PM on June 29. “A three-day window is given for the PC remand application. The court stated, “He will be produced on 29 before 7 PM.”The CBI claimed in the motion that was submitted to the court that Kejriwal needed to be questioned in order to uncover the “larger conspiracy” in the case.

According to the agency, the Delhi chief minister needed to face the evidence and other defendants in the case. Federal agencies had previously asserted that the chief minister was involved in all of this and that the so-called “south lobby” influenced the creation of the now-scrapped excise policy. Kejriwal has to be questioned while in custody because “he is failing to even recognise that Vijay Nair was working under him,” CBI attorney DP Singh stated in court.Singh asserted that Kejriwal had stated that Nair collaborated with Atishi Marlena and Saurabh Bhardwaj, and that the chief minister is “placing all the blame on Manish Sisodia & claiming that he is ignorant of the excise policy.”

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