“This much is true: Asthana knows CBI like the back of his hand. Jaiswal is an outsider. But no harm done,” says a senior IPS officer.
What goes in Jaiswal’s favour is his affability, friendliness and capacity to pull along with the government. “He’s quite a political being,” says one of his contemporaries.
He comes from Dhanbad, then in undivided Bihar, now in Jharkhand, from a business family. In his generation, he is the first bureaucrat. He started his career as an additional superintendent of police, Amravati, Maharashtra, in 1986, serving in the Gadchiroli district, a hub of left-wing extremism. When the high court ordered a SIT to examine the operations of Abdul Rehman Telgi’s fake stamp paper scam, Jaiswal headed the investigation that was later taken over by the CBI. He investigated the Malegaon bomb blasts (2006) and when he was posted in the Intelligence Bureau (IB), came in close touch with Ajit K Doval, the man who would later become National Security Advisor. He stayed in Delhi in the Research and Analysis Wing (R&AW) for close to a decade. In 2018, he returned to Mumbai as the police commissioner under the Devendra Fadnavis-led Maharashtra government. A year later in February 2019, he was appointed Maharashtra’s director general of police (DGP). The Elgaar Parishad and Bhima Koregaon violence cases were investigated during his tenure as DGP. The Elgaar Parishad case was transferred to the National Investigation Agency in 2020.