New Delhi: Sunil Kulkarni, an eyewitness in a hit-and-run case allegedly involving a retired Navy chief’s grandson, has said he did not see the faces of any of the three persons in the BMW car.
Kulkarni told a Delhi court on Thursday the physique of one of the three persons was similar to Sanjeev Nanda, who was allegedly driving the BMW which crushed six persons to death in Delhi in 1999.
Kulkarni said the car hit the six persons and drove off in around eight seconds. Kulakarni has changed his testimony twice earlier, saying that he was under pressure from the police.
On July 11 he told court that he had heard one of the occupants calling out for “Sanjeev” to leave the place after the accident. In his deposition earlier, he had said he was not sure about the name and that it was probably a nickname like “Sanj” or “Sanz”.
During cross-examination, Kulkarni told the court he was sure the words uttered by one of the occupants were “let us rush” and the name called out was Sanjeev.
Kulkarni did a sting operation for a TV channel two months back and allegedly caught on camera defence and prosecution lawyers in the case offering him money to retract his statement.
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