The sessions court that is leading the trial in the Salman Khan hit-and-run case tackled the record answers put together by the Regional Transport Offices and the Excise Department expressing that he didn’t have a driving permit or an alcohol grant at the time of the 2002 accident.
Bandra police, who explored the case, had composed to RTOs in rural Andheri and Wadala and the Excise Department looking for data in the matter of whether the Bollywood performing artist held a driving permit and an alcohol license. The police’s letters and particular answers were put together by Special Public Prosecutor Pradeep Gharat under the watchful eye of judge D W Deshpande.
Khan’s attorney advocate Shrikant Shivade said these reports ought to have been submitted alongside the charge-sheet and not currently when the trial had come to the fag-end. In any case the judge went up against them record.
Their worth as confirmation would be chosen at the time of last contentions, said the judge. Khan is accused of smashing his car into a bakery in suburban Bandra on September 28, 2002, slaughtering one individual and harming four who were considering the asphalt. He was smashed at the time, as per the police.
The answers of RTO and Excise powers are essential as they proclaim that Khan had alcohol outside his home without a license and afterward determined his SUV when he didn’t even have a driving permit. In the interim, the guard attorney today documented an application trying to review examining Officer Ravindra Kadam as it needed to question him about the charge of blamable murder which was summoned against Salman in 2013.
The legal advisor said he might want to interrogate Kadam as Khan’s bodyguard, Constable Ravindra Patil, the observer to the setback, is no more. The indictment questioned, saying that the blamed’s legal advisor had enough chance to interrogate Kadam. The judge asked Gharat to record a composed answer to the application on the following date, March 24.