Delhi High Court orders that the trial court order granting statutory bail to Kapil Wadhawan and Dheeraj Wadhawan would not take effect until the next date of hearing . The Delhi High Court has requested that the impugned order dated December 3, 2022, be kept in force until the next day of hearing .
New Delhi (India), December 8: The Delhi High Court announced on Thursday that the trial court order granting statutory bail to Kapil Wadhawan and Dheeraj Wadhawan, who are ex-Promoters of DHFL, would not take effect until the next date of hearing.Justice Amit Sharma's bench of Justice Amit Sharma said on Wednesday that respondents (Wadhawan Brothers) will not proceed with their bail bonds before the Special Court.The Delhi High Court has requested that the impugned order dated December 3, 2022, be kept in force until the next day of hearing, according to CBI counsel Anupam Sharma, who challenged the trial court order and asked for a brief discussion of the matter during his appeal.According to the order, senior counsel Vijay Aggarwal, who represents Kapil Wadhawan, said that the CBI had not given his client enough time to respond to the CBI's petition and requested Advocate Aggarwal said that the bail order was not necessary because the two defendants were pending in several other lawsuits, and that the trial court judge said that accused persons Kapil Wadhawan and Dheeraj Wadhawan were not entitled to statutory bail because of an incomplete chargesheet, but that this court is compelled to free them from jail by requiring them to make a mandatory waiver of default bail due to an incomplete chargesheet.
Otherwise, forensic officers are human beings, and it would be unjustified to expect them to work for complete 24x7 days and to rush from one place to another without any disruption, according to the trial Court, although both of them were officially arrested on July 19, 2022, as in other cases pending in Lucknow and Mumbai since April 2020.On this chargesheet, you already have your cognition.According to the FIR, Advocate Vijay Aggarwal, a lawyer for the Wadhawan brothers argued that an incomplete chargesheet had been submitted and that CBI was able to recover only 75 accused persons out of a total of Rs 34,615 crore owed by the consortium banks, which was allegedly mismanaged and robbed in the event of a separate prosecution case.