Police harassment confirmed by their vague denials: Hansa to HC

Police harassment confirmed by their vague denials: Hansa to HC

The next hearing in the case is posted for 26 February 2021.

Hansa to HC

NEW DELHI: Hansa Research Group, which had filed a writ in the Bombay high court in early November 2020, complaining of police harassment in the TRP scam case, has now filed a rejoinder in the court to the reply filed by Mumbai police. Hansa has claimed that the reply by the Mumbai police “contains nothing but few denials and unsubstantiated, vague and superficial allegations.” The rejoinder further stated that the police allegation that Hansa is aiding and abetting ARG Outlier Media Pvt Ltd (Republic TV) is nothing but a figment of the imagination. Hansa “has no interest in any media channel” and the police cannot compel Hansa to “implicate or exonerate any channel.” 

The Hansa rejoinder refers to the legal doctrine of non-traverse which means that where a material averment is passed over without specific denial, it is taken to be admitted. In the case of Hansa’s writ petition, the response from the Mumbai police has not referred to the main averments in the writ petition, thereby signifying acquiescence. Further, the police reply has come from respondent #3, an ACP who has never personally interacted with Hansa and is not the main respondent against whom Hansa’s writ was filed. 

Hansa has also countered the police allegation that the group’s interest in advertising on TV channels was kept hidden from the Broadcast Audience Research Council and law enforcement. Hansa has submitted documentary evidence of full disclosure with BARC at the time of commencement of field services. The same has been submitted to the Mumbai police in November itself. In spite of this, the police has repeated the allegation which “speaks volumes about their prejudice,” charged Hansa.

It went on to add that Hansa has offered full cooperation to the police in their investigation and has shared all the information available with the authorities. Given Hansa’s role as petitioner and first informant, the Bombay high court has directed that the police can call Hansa personnel for two days in a week and engage with them for a “reasonable period” of time. The next hearing on the case is posted for 26 February 2021.

The affidavit submitted by the Mumbai police earlier denied “as totally false” Hansa’s allegation that it was being pressured to “name a particular channel.” It stated that just because Hansa is the complainant in the case, it cannot seek immunity from investigation. Further, the police said that the research agency’s plea to transfer the probe into the scam to the CBI was spurred by ulterior motives.