Continuing his tirade NCP spokesperson Nawab Malik has attacked Sameer Wankhede again and has accused the NCB official of tapping phones and planting drugs on people. The Maharashtra leader claimed that he received a letter from a Narcotics Control Bureau insider in which 26 instances of Wankhede planted drugs on a person to falsely accused them have been listed.
The fresh attack from Malik comes amid the ongoing drugs on cruise case which involves star-kid Aryan Khan, who’s currently being heard for appeal in a special court. Malik’s latest attack comes just a day after he released a birth certificate, alleging that Sameer Wankhede is the son of Dawood Wankhede.
Background
Any high-profile case which involves drugs, money and scandal, will have its fair share of twists. This is especially true if at the front and center of the case stands the 23-year-old son of the most popular actor in a country of over 1.2 billion people. The drugs-on-cruise case is still far from fizzling out and media is reporting every move of all the parties involved in the matter.
Interestingly, a fresh face appeared in the case in the form of NCP spokesperson Nawab Malik. Mr. Malik, who found his son-in-law arrested by the NCB and released later, has been attacking the primary investigator in the matter. Sameer Wankhede, the NCB Zonal Director, has categorically denied Malik’s accusation, but that has not stopped Malik to continue the attacks.
The Facts of the Matter
NCP spokesperson Nawab Malik carried forward another fresh attack on NCB Zonal Director Sameer Wankhede. Malik released a letter via Twitter, which is allegedly written by an NCB employee who has worked in NCB for two years.
Taking to Twitter, Malik wrote, “Here are the contents of the letter received by me from an unnamed NCB official. As a responsible citizen I will be forwarding this letter to DG Narcotics requesting him to include this letter in the investigation being conducted on Sameer Wankhede.”
Here are the contents of the letter received by me from an unnamed NCB official.
As a responsible citizen I will be forwarding this letter to DG Narcotics requesting him to include this letter in the investigation being conducted on Sameer Wankhede pic.twitter.com/SOClI3ntAn— Nawab Malik نواب ملک नवाब मलिक (@nawabmalikncp) October 26, 2021
Also Read: Amid Aryan Khan Drug Case, Ministry Bats for Decriminalization If Drugs Found in Small Quantity
New Allegations Made by Nawab Malik
According to the allegations made in the letter, NCB’s Sameer Wankhede and his team have in the past framed several people by planting contrabands and creating false cases based on the same. The letter gives instance of as many as 26 cases filed this year and gives the account of how the people were framed.
The letter alleges that Delhi Police Commissioner Rakesh Asthana directed Sameer Wankhede to frame Bollywood celebrities in drug related cases using any measure possible. This direction came in the wake of the untimely death of Sushant Singh Rajput.
Bollywood Celebrities Were Framed by Sameer Wankhede: Nawab Malik
In the letter it is also alleged that after Sameer Wankhede framed Bollywood celebrities, he asked for crores of rupees for payoff. The letter also mentions KP Malhotra as being an accomplice of Sameer Wankhede.
According to the letter, celebrities such as Deepika Padukone, Shraddha Kapoor, Rakul Preet Singh, Sara Ali Khan, Ria Chakraborty and Arjun Rampal were involved in drug related matter. The letter further alleged that advocate Ayaz Khan used to extort the money from these actors and actresses.
Also Read: Cruise Drug Bust Case: NCB Questions Ananya Pandey, Ananya Denies Arranging Drugs for Aryan
“War Against Injustice, Not Agency”: Nawab Malik
After launching a fresh attack on NCB and Sameer Wankhede, NCP’s Nawab Malik claimed that his fight is not against the agency but against injustice. “I am only exposing one official who got the job by fraud. Wankhede used fake birth certificate to get the NCB job. He has been illegally tapping phones of some people in Thane and Mumbai,” he said, as quoted in a The Quint report.