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| JK IPS officer Saji held with Rs 12 mn drugs | | | EARLY TIMES REPORT Jammu, Jan 25: One of the fine cops with Jammu and Kashmir Police, a 1995 batch officer of the Indian Police Service, Saji Mohan was today arrested in Mumbai with drug consignments worth Rs 120 Million in international market. Mohan was currently on Central deputation and was a Deputy Director in the Enforcement Directorate in Mumbai. Till recently he was chief of the Chandigarh headquartered Narcotics Control Bureau from where he is believed to have siphoned off the drug share out of seizures. Mohan was nabbed early Sunday with the drug consignment, estimated to be worth Rs.1.20 million in the domestic market and over Rs.120 million in the international market - from a posh location near Raheja Classique, in Oshiwara, a north-west Mumbai suburb, Mumbai ATS chief K.P. Raghuvanshi told mediapersons in Mumbai. Mohan was arrested following a tip-off given by a constable of Haryana police, Rakesh Kumar and one Vicky Oberoi. The duo was arrested Jan 17 with 1.50 kg heroin by the ATS, the official said. Their interrogation revealed that a large consignment of drugs was expected to be delivered by "a senior officer" soon in the same area. "Acting on the information, ATS sleuths posed as customers and successfully managed to nab Mohan," Raghuvanshi said. "Apart from the drugs consignment, police have also recovered a laptop and some CDs from Mohan," he said. Belonging to the IPS batch of 1995 in the Jammu and Kashmir cadre, Mohan was the zonal director - Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB), Chandigarh. He was transferred recently to Mumbai as deputy director in the Enforcement Directorate, Mumbai. Raghuvanshi said that when Mohan was the ZD-NCB Chandigarh, he had seized around 30-35 kg of heroin. He had manipulated the figures of the seizure and attempted to siphon off the narcotics in the open markets. Mohan was produced before a magistrate this afternoon and remanded to police custody till Jan 30, Raghuvanshi said. About the larger ramifications of the case, Raghuvanshi said: "We will investigate whether Mohan and his accomplices are linked to drug cartels in Mumbai and elsewhere, and the whereabouts of the remaining quantity of the missing drugs." |
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