Rs 10 crore was payoff to ensure ex-UP minister Gayatri Prajapati's bail, finds probe
The startling facts came to light after Allahabad high court Chief Justice Dilip B Bhosale sought an inquiry into Prajapati’s bail.

A sum of Rs 10 crore also changed hands in the “deal”.
The startling facts came to light after Allahabad high court Chief Justice Dilip B Bhosale sought an inquiry into Prajapati’s bail. The probe revealed high-level corruption in posting of judges to sensitive courts which handle cases of heinous crimes such as rape and murder.
In his report, Bhosale said additional district and sessions judge O P Mishra, who granted bail to Prajapati on April 25, was posted as POCSO (protection of children from sexual offences) judge on April 7 when he had just three weeks left for retirement.
He was appointed bypassing norms and by removing a judge who was “handling the assignment efficiently” for a year.
IB probe establishes graft in judge’s POCSO posting
The report said the grant of bail was settled upon payment of Rs 10 crore, of which Rs 5 crore was shared among three lawyers who acted as middlemen and Rs 5 crore was paid to the POCSO judge (Mishra) and district judge Rajendra Singh who posted Mishra to the sensitive court.
Singh has been questioned and
“Laxmi Kant Rathaur, who was assigned POCSO jurisdiction on July 18, 2016, was doing very well. There was absolutely no justification or reason to change him suddenly and appoint O P Mishra as POCSO judge on April 7, 2017, more so when he was about to retire within three weeks,” Justice Bhosale is believed to have observed in his confidential report.
After a nudge from the SC, the UP police had registered an FIR on February 17 against Prajapati, a minister in the Samajwadi Party government, in a rape case.
A probe by the Intelligence Bureau established corruption in Mishra’s posting to the sensitive POCSO court and raised questions on the transfer-posting regime in UP’s subordinate judiciary.
The report said the “integrity of O P Mishra was doubtful and he did not enjoy good reputation”.
The investigation came up with details of how three advocates who were officebearers of the bar association struck a deal with the district judge to post Mishra to the POCSO court despite the latter having very little time left for retirement.
A series of meetings were held between the three lawyers and the district judge in the latter’s chamber 3-4 weeks prior to the bail.
The last such meeting was held on April 24, the day Prajapati filed the bail application in Mishra’s court.
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