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Telgi admits payments to Bhujbal: SIT

By Abhijit Sathe in Mumbai
February 10, 2004 18:59 IST

Abdul Karim Telgi has admitted making payments to former Maharashtra deputy chief minister Chhagan Bhujbal in return for favours, the Special Investigation Team has claimed.

The prime accused in the multicrore stamp paper scam made the admission during the P-300 Brain Mapping tests performed on him, the SIT said.

"The responses to the words listed in target 9 (payment to Bhujbal) and target 10 (payment to Krishna Yadav) showed high level of activation and high semantic processing in both the trials. This activation strengthens the experimental knowledge of the events, which he did reveal during pre-test interview and narco test," said the report of the P-300 test presented to the special court in Pune.

Bhujbal, however, told PTI on Tuesday neither he nor his family members were involved in the scam and the scientific tests were not reliable.

The SIT had submitted the P-300 test and the polygraph test reports performed on Telgi in December 2003 to the special MCOCA court at Pune, as supportive evidence to the third supplementary charge sheet filed earlier this month.

The Forensic Science Laboratory, Bangalore, performed the tests in December 2003.

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"The major findings reported by the Brain Mapping tests are indicative of the possession of knowledge about the activities (listed above) by Karim Telgi; brain activation during preparation processing while evoking primary encoding indicates active participation of Karim Telgi in all these activities," the report stated.

The report, a copy of which is available with PTI, said Telgi was subjected to three tests -- Lie Detector, P-300 Brain Mapping and Narcoanalysis. While the first two have evidential value, the Narcoanalysis test does not have evidential value but is used to support the evidence.

The Brain Mapping test was performed on Telgi in two stages. In the first stage, a pre-test interview was done, which was followed by recording of an EEG to invoke 'Event Related Potential (ERP) responses', SIT sources told PTI.

The test was conducted using three types of words. Firstly, 'neutral words', which have no direct relationship with case were presented to Telgi.

In the second part, 'probe words' directly related to the case were used to elicit concealed information.

In the third part, 'target words', which are not in part one and two, but are based on confidential findings, which the subject does not know, or polygraph findings or possibilities postulated by the investigating officers were used.

According to FSL authorities, if the subject has truthfully participated in the act suggested by target words, it would generate ERP, while there would be no ERP when neutral words are presented.

"Generation of such ERP responses associated with probe are suggestive of information in the individual, which would have been acquired only by direct participation in act or event," the report said.

In case of Telgi, the target words formed to elicit any concealed or encoded information from Telgi were:

Telgi, said SIT sources, showed signs acknowledging payments to R S Sharma, which he also admitted in the subsequent Narco test. He also acknowledged Sharma offered favours in Pune stamp cases, the FSL report has said.

The report said that Telgi has knowledge of Rs 75 lakhs paid to API Dilip Kamath, and he also admitted to this during the pre-test interview.

Telgi showed signs of having knowledge of payments made to Vagal and DCP Pradeep Sawant, although he denied this in the pre-test interview, the report said.

Telgi supported the words relating to facilities Sharma provided him during his stay in custody of Mumbai police, the report said.

Abhijit Sathe in Mumbai
Source: PTI
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