Karnataka judiciary sexual harassment case: Not called for inquiry or giving evidence, says complainant
“Till today I have not been called upon for inquiry or giving evidence about the complaint given against him (judge P Krishna Bhat) with sworn affidavit by any authority or by the Karnataka high court or SC,” she said.

“Till today I have not been called upon for inquiry or giving evidence about the complaint given against him (judge P Krishna Bhat) with sworn affidavit by any authority or by the Hon’ble Karnataka high court or the Hon’ble Supreme Court of India,” she conveyed in her representations to both the President and prime minister last December.
In both these letters, accessed by ET, the victim has referred to her original complaint of June 3, 2016, to the chief justice of India, on which she claims to have heard nothing, except for a delayed postal acknowledgement dated December 14, 2016.
“It appears that he has managed to hush up the complaint by manipulating records,” she alleged.

In her 2016 original complaint to the CJI, the victim has narrated her alleged harassment ordeal as a junior to Bhat during his stint as district Judge of Belgaum. She has claimed that the judge made her visit his house at odd hours.
February 2014: The complainant alleges that Bhat sent a message “to secure my presence at his home at about 10 pm, asking me to come alone”. On her refusal, she has claimed, that a male colleague was sent to persuade her. She went and was apparently not let off until midnight.
April 2014: The victim has alleged that the judge called her to his residence to apparently discuss a local complaint against her. She has claimed that she was made to stay until 2 am.
August 2014: The victim has alleged that the judge used the “pretext” of another complaint to call her to his residence at 10 pm and let her off at 2:30 am.
Further, the victim has claimed that the judge told her colleagues that he would reflect his annoyance in the annual assessment.
This is at odds with the Supreme Court Collegium, which has recorded that it had assessed the complaint before recommending Bhat’s name.
The government is of the view that instead of discreet inquiries as carried out by the Karnataka high court chief justice, a proper inquiry should be carried out where the complainant too can get a hearing. Meanwhile, the matter has snowballed into another controversy over whether the executive is encroaching into the judiciary’s domain.
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