Mumbai: Noted film maker Sanjay Gupta on November 18 turned hostile by refuting
police allegations that he had a telephonic talk with Pakistan-based gangster Chhota
Shakeel in the company of actor Sanjay Dutt, director Mahesh Manjrekar and financier
Harish Sughand from a hotel two years ago.
Deposing before designated judge A P Bhangale, Gupta, a prime witness in the case of
alleged nexus of Bollywood with the underworld, denied that he, Dutt, Manjrekar and
Sughand had developed links with Shakeel for pecuniary gains.
To a question by prosecutor Rohini Salian, the witness also denied that they were
front men of Shakeel and had connived with him to capture Bollywood.
Earlier, in a statement to police, Gupta had said that he, Dutt, Manjrekar and
Sughand had spoken to Shakeel on telephone on November 14, 2000 from a hotel in
Nasik.
Police had recorded this telephonic talk and obtained sample voices of Gupta,
Manjrekar and Sughand to match them with the ones figuring in the alleged
conversation. The spectrograph test has indeed confirmed their voices.
He is fifth witness in this case to turn hostile. Others who have not supported the
prosecution are financier Harish Sughand, businessman Aftab Patel, director of Venus
Music Company Ratan Jain and film director Mahesh Manjrekar.
The prosecution has alleged that gangster Shakeel had developed links with financier
Shah and producer Rizvi to target film personalities for personal gains.
Police have recorded telephonic talks between them, which allegedly reveal that
film "Chori Chori Chupke Chupke" was made at Shakeel's instance.
PTI