The Supreme Court on Friday extended till March 17
protection from arrest to former IAS probationer Puja Khedkar, accused of
cheating and wrongly availing OBC and disability quota benefits in the civil
services examination.
A bench of Justices B V Nagarathna and Satish
Chandra Sharma directed Khedkar to cooperate in the investigation.
During the hearing, Additional Solicitor General S V
Raju sought rime to file reply in the matter.
Senior advocate Siddharth Luthra, appearing for
Khedkar, submitted that police were not calling her for investigation and she
was willing to come.
The top court directed the ASG to file reply within
three weeks.
The apex court on January 15 had issued notice to
the Delhi government and the Union Public Service Commission (UPSC) on
Khedkar's plea seeking anticipatory bail.
Khedkar is accused of misrepresenting information in
her application for the UPSC civil services examination, 2022, for availing
reservation benefits.
She refuted all the allegations against her.
While dismissing her anticipatory bail plea, the
high court found a strong prima facie case against Khedkar and said an
investigation was needed to unearth the "larger conspiracy" to
manipulate the system, and allowing the reprieve would adversely impact it.
"Anticipatory bail plea is dismissed. Interim
protection from arrest is vacated," the high court said.
Khedkar was granted an interim protection from
arrest when the high court issued notice on her anticipatory bail plea on
August 12, 2024, and it was extended from time to time.
The high court observed the UPSC examination is the
most prestigious test and the case was a classic instance of fraud committed on
a constitutional body and the society.
The anticipatory bail plea was opposed by the Delhi
Police counsel and the complainant, the UPSC, in the high court.
Khedkar's counsel argued she was willing to join and
cooperate in the investigation and as all the material was documentary in
nature, her custody was not required whereas Delhi Police insisted on her
custodial interrogation to unearth the involvement of others.
The UPSC opposed the plea and said Khedkar committed
a fraud against it and the public, and her custodial interrogation was necessary
to unearth the "magnitude" of the fraud which couldn't have been done
without the help of others.
The commission initiated a series of actions against
Khedkar, including lodging of a criminal case, for availing attempts in the
civil services exam by faking her identity and Delhi Police lodged an FIR for
various offences.