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IAS officer DK Ravi's death: CBI turns down Karnataka govt's request for a time-bound probe

Karnataka CM Siddaramaiah said the government will approach CBI once again.

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CBI has turned down the request of Karnataka Government seeking a time-bound probe in the alleged suicide of IAS officer D K Ravi, saying there is no provision in law to complete investigations in a given period.

Chief Minister Siddaramaiah on Monday said his government would again request the investigating body to probe the case. "They have sent it back, saying that do not put the condition like that. Again we will send it to the CBI," Siddaramaiah said. 

CBI sources said that a communication has been sent to Department of Personnel and Training requesting for a fresh notification to takeover probe in Ravi's death.

They said once fresh notification is received, the agency will examine the matter whether to takeover probe or not in the controversial death which has snowballed into a major political controversy in Karnataka.

The sources said the notification received from the DoPT has come with a request to complete to the probe within three months which was not according to law.

They said state government handing over probe to CBI cannot give time limit for concluding the probe, hence a fresh notification has been sought from the state government.

The death of Ravi, who took on land mafia and realtors, spiralled into a major controversy after Chief Minister Siddaramaiah initially refused to seek a CBI probe in the case. The case was being probed by Karnataka CID.

Opposition parties and activists then mounted pressure on the state government demanding that the investigation in the case be handed over to CBI.

The decision to transfer the probe to CBI come after Congress president Sonia Gandhi wrote in March to Ravi's wife promising a fair and transparent probe into the incident.

This came after Ravi's mother reportedly wrote an open letter to her seeking an impartial probe. Siddaramaiah had said then that there had never been a case where an incident had straightaway been referred to CBI immediately after its occurrence.

With the federal set-up in the country, the Centre could not refer a case suo motu to CBI and could do so based on a state's request, he had said.

The state government had maintained that Ravi's death prima facie seemed to be a case of suicide, but the opposition parties and the family of the IAS officer have refused to accept the theory.

Ravi's family had raised doubts over the police claim that he committed suicide, saying that he was under "political pressure". 

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