The assertion by the CBI comes in the light of reports that the Army has sought early handing over of 900 body bags and 150 caskets procured in 1999 lying in the warehouse after allegations of kickbacks in the USD 4 lakh deal and subsequent CBI probe into it.
The official said the seized property could be released only after a court order and the army completing the required formalities.
The Army's renewed pitch for getting custody of the body bags and caskets comes at a time when images of bodies of seven military personnel wrapped in plastic sacks and tied up in cardboard triggered outrage last week. The military personnel were killed in an Mi-17 helicopter crash in Tawang last Friday.
Official sources said yesterday the Army has requested the CBI again to facilitate the handing over of the body bags and caskets as the probe into their procurement was over and the case was closed in 2013.
The agency wrote to army on February 7, 2017 saying that it was not agitating discharge of the items as the same were no longer required to be produced in any court further,
The CBI had asked the army to take permission from the Additional Sessions Judge of the special court to get those items released, the official said.
However, the CBI official said it was not aware about the decision of the court to the army's application.
The CBI had filed chargesheet in August 2009 against then military attache in the Indian Embassy in the US, Major General (Retd) Arun Roy, Col (Retd) S K Malik, Col S D Singh and US based private person Victor Baiza of Buritrol and Baizarces, the vendor which supplied the casket.
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