BJP MLA Sunil Kumar demands forensic test of Karnataka CM's signature
Sunil Kumar said that those claiming the letter to be fake have a responsibility to seek a thorough probe.
PTI
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The CMO alleged the act was malicious and aimed at defaming CM Siddaramaiah and Congress govt (ANI/X/@karkalasunil)
Bengaluru, 14 Feb
A day after police registered a case over a fake note purportedly issued from the Chief Minister's Office (CMO) in Karnataka, BJP MLA V Sunil Kumar escalated his attack on Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Saturday, demanding a forensic probe into the document and questioning the CMO's functioning.
Police
registered the case against an unidentified person on Friday, following a
complaint from the CMO over the circulation on social media of the fake note,
which falsely claimed that a district health and family welfare officer in
Mandya was posted as the deputy commissioner of excise in Mysuru.
The case
was lodged at the Vidhana Soudha police station under the Bharatiya Nyaya
Sanhita (BNS) provisions relating to forgery and the use of forged documents.
The CMO
has alleged that the act was carried out with malicious intent to bring
disrepute to the chief minister and the Congress government in the southern
state.
"If
the letter bearing the Chief Minister's signature itself is fake, should we not
reflect on how the Chief Minister's Office is functioning?" Kumar asked in
a post on X a day after the case was filed.
The
Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) MLA from Karkala said the controversy raises
serious questions on administrative oversight.
"This
clearly shows that Chief Minister Siddaramaiah is now focussed only on the
chair and not on the functioning of his office," he alleged.
Demanding
a forensic examination, Kumar said, "If this letter is fake, then the
authenticity of the signature on it must also be established. Therefore, the
signature should be subjected to examination by the Forensic Science Laboratory
(FSL) to determine whether it is genuine or forged. It would not be surprising
if this turns out to be a major 'letterhead' scam operating within the Chief
Minister's Office."
He
further questioned the circumstances under which the document surfaced.
"Why
did the Chief Minister sign a letter without a date? Who were the persons who
got the letter signed? What benefit did they derive from it? All these aspects
should come out through an investigation. Otherwise, the investigation ordered
by Siddaramaiah would appear to be a 'kill the messenger' tactic," he
said.
Stating
that he had cited the letter believing it to be genuine, Kumar said, "Like
Siddaramaiah, I too am a person in public life -- a responsible MLA in the
Opposition. Believing the letter I received to be genuine, I cited it as an
example of administrative lapses in the government."
He also
said that those claiming the letter to be fake have a responsibility to seek a
thorough probe.
"Those
who argue that the letter is fake also bear some responsibility, because it
carries the signature of the Chief Minister of the state. Before declaring the
letter itself as fake, there should also be an investigation into the alleged
'letterhead' scam," Kumar added.
In his
response to the development, Siddaramaiah on Friday described the creation and
circulation of the fake note as a condemnable and very serious crime, and urged
social-media users to verify information before sharing it, warning that
spreading unverified content in the era of Photoshop or artificial intelligence
(AI) could also amount to a crime.
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