Belongings have been seized on December 11, 1996 from Jayalalithaa’s residence in Chennai.
Bengaluru:
A civil court docket right here has put aside an order of the general public data officer (PIO) who had refused to share data on disposing of the immovable belongings of former Tamil Nadu chief minister J Jayalalithaa.
RTI activist T Narasimhamurthy had sought data on the Particular Court docket’s instructions concerning the auctioning of the belongings that have been seized on December 11, 1996 from Jayalalithaa’s residence in Chennai.
The disproportionate belongings case in opposition to her and others was transferred to Karnataka by the Supreme Court docket in 2003 and the seized belongings together with sarees, shawls and footwear have been shifted to Bengaluru.
The Particular Court docket right here held Jayalalithaa and the opposite accused within the case as responsible in 2014. The fabric proof within the case remains to be beneath custody.
Narasimhamurthy had sought auctioning of the belongings.
The PIO had refused to offer him data concerning what the Particular Court docket had ordered about disposing of the belongings. He then approached the Principal Metropolis Civil and Classes Decide, which can also be the First Appellate Authority for the RTI circumstances.
The civil court docket not too long ago directed the PIO to offer him with the data together with the ultimate order of the Particular Court docket and in addition the communication of the court docket to the federal government to nominate a particular prosecutor to eliminate the properties.
(Aside from the headline, this story has not been edited by String Reveals workers and is printed from a syndicated feed.)
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