This story is from February 14, 2005

CBI has egg on its face, but wants probe on

NEW DELHI: CBI's major lead in Bofors probe has turned out to be a red herring. The agency is now left with no substantial lead to pursue.
CBI has egg on its face, but wants probe on
NEW DELHI: The CBI''s investigation into the Bofors payoffs has suffered a crippling blow with what was thought to be a breakthrough turning into a false trail.
In a major setback to the premier investigating agency, it has discovered that its belief that the money lying in the two London accounts of the alleged middleman, Ottavio Quattrocchi, originated from Bahamas is not correct.
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The "discovery" of the origin of the money that the agency maintained was the kickback Quattrocchi got from the Swedish manufacturers of the 135 mm howitzers, had been held to be a major breakthrough which the agency thought could help it unravel the mystery of Rs 64-crore payoff scam.
It was in April 2004 that the agency, based on the inputs it got from teams that visited Bahamas, Switzerland, the US and other places, claimed that the money had come to London from Bahamas.
It even "re-constructed" the route the kickback money would have taken while reaching the two accounts. The excitement turned into disappointment two months ago when the agency found out that the money trail it had constructed was completely erroneous.
"The latest evidence shows that the money reached London from a Swiss bank," says an officer.
The agency is now left with no substantial lead to pursue. It has, of course, taken up the case with the Swiss authorities, but that is seen as more of a proforma exercise.

Senior officers concede it is a futile endeavour. "As a rule, countries like Switzerland do not entertain requests for cooperation in cases which are more than seven years old," one officer said.
Though disappointed, some of the officers on the case want to persevere with it.
"The CBI is taking a stand that since the fact (of the money reaching the London accounts from a Swiss bank) was discovered only in 2004, the Swiss government should help the agency to get more facts on the issue," one officer said.
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