Hit-and-run: Salman’s lawyer questions his alcohol test after 2002 accident
The prosecution in the 2002 hit-and-run case, in which actor Salman Khan was convicted, could not establish conclusively that he had tested positive for alcohol and the records in this regard were suspect, his lawyer told the Bombay high court on Monday.
According to the police, Salman, driving in a drunk condition, rammed his car into a bakery in suburban Bandra on September 28, 2002, killing one person and injuring four. “The seal and vials (of Salman’s blood samples) were not preserved and this creates a doubt whether the blood samples were that of Salman or someone else’s,” said his lawyer Amit Desai, arguing the actor’s appeal before Justice AR Joshi.
He added: “It wasn’t clear whether the police <g data-gr-id="27">constable in fact</g> delivered the samples from JJ Hospital to Bandra police station (to be passed on to the <g data-gr-id="15">forensice</g> lab); the prosecution also did not examine the constable who brought Salman to the hospital. All this puts a heavy burden on <g data-gr-id="25">prosecution</g> to prove that Salman had taken drinks.”
The prescribed procedure for collecting blood sample after a mishap was not followed nor did the police obtain Salman’s written consent before taking <g data-gr-id="24">blood</g> sample, he said.
In the Emergency Patients Record or the casualty register at the hospital, Desai said the word ‘alcohol’ was included by drawing a mark but the carbon copy of the register page shows the word written at the bottom of the page.