The court which pronounced its judgement on Wednesday, copy of which was available today, also did not find even an "iota of evidence" to prove that the former chief minister has abused his official position as a public servant.
"The prosecution has failed to prove there was a meeting of mind and dominant object of a conspiracy between accused Number One, Yeddyurappa and 12 others including B Y Vijayendra and B Y Raghavendra, his sons," Judge R B Dharmagoudar said in his order.
He also said the prosecution failed to prove each and every circumstances so as to complete the chain and "suspicion cannot take the place of a legal proof".
The petitioner had alleged that Yeddyurappa in furtherance of a conspiracy, by abusing his official position as a public servant, had illegally denotified Rachenahalli land here to obtain pecuniary advantage to his kin and fixed premium of iron ore at 50 per cent and suppressed the loss suffered by state-owned Mysore Minerals Ltd (MML).
Pronouncing his judgement, Dharmagoudar said the prosecution has failed to prove that Yeddyurappa abused his official position in denotifying Rachenahalli land for obtaining a pecuniary advantage to his two sons and son-in-law Sohan Kumar.
CBI had filed a charge sheet in 2012 against Yeddyurappa, his sons and son-in-law, Prerana Trust, M/s South West Mining Company and Bellary-based M/s JSW Steel for alleged abuse of official position and corruption invoking Section 120B (criminal conspiracy) and 420 (cheating) of the India Penal Code and various sections of the Prevention of Corruption Act.
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