On April 14, 1993, Baljeet Parmar, against the law reporter operating for a Mumbai tabloid broke the news that Sanjay Dutt possessed an AK-56 rifle. Five days later, the actor used to be arrested, as soon as he returned to the rustic from his outdoor shoot in Mauritius.
Sanjay Dutt used to be arrested and charged below the stringent Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act or TADA for legal conspiracy along with aiding and abetting terrorism, among others.
After a felony combat that stretched on for years, he breathed a sigh of reduction when in November 2006, a TADA courtroom dropped the fees of terrorism in opposition to him and said that he had received the gun for self-defence. He used to be, however, convicted below the Arms Act and sentenced to six years of imprisonment.
This chapter unearths a point out in Rajkumar Hirani's just lately launched biopic of the Munna Bhai MBBS actor, Sanju. Baljeet Parmar, who's decided to not watch Sanju, dismissed the movie as an attempt "to make a quick buck".
In a Facebook post, he wrote, "The so-called bio pics are tailored to suite the man or the woman they are based on. They are not to inspire the audiences but are there to create a smokescreen to blur their minds."
Parmar added, "The use or misuse of drugs, sleeping with women, branding media as an addictive potion, finding faults with system or society, willingly and knowingly Indulge in criminal activity, showing no remorse for your past actions, playing the sympathy card and crying victim, if that is what SANJU is about, I do not regret my decision of staying away from cinema halls."
Earlier, the journalist had printed how he were given whiff of the fact that Sanjay Dutt's identify had cropped up whilst investigating the 1993 serial blasts in Mumbai.
His source, a senior IPS officer, used to be prepared to divulge best that the individual below the scanner used to be an "MP ka beta". While Parmar had a powerful feeling that the MP in question used to be Sunil Dutt, he could no longer ascertain the news as all senior officers involved in the investigation kept their lips firmly sealed.
As a last-ditch effort, Parmar "tried a bluff". "I called an IPS officer at Mahim and said: 'Suna hai aapne kisi MP ke bete ko uthaya hai (I have heard that you have picked up an MP's son)'. The answer slipped out. 'No, we have not, as he is shooting abroad,' he replied. There it was - my big story. It had to be Sanjay Dutt."
Sanjay Dutt used to be arrested and charged below the stringent Terrorist and Disruptive Activities (Prevention) Act or TADA for legal conspiracy along with aiding and abetting terrorism, among others.
After a felony combat that stretched on for years, he breathed a sigh of reduction when in November 2006, a TADA courtroom dropped the fees of terrorism in opposition to him and said that he had received the gun for self-defence. He used to be, however, convicted below the Arms Act and sentenced to six years of imprisonment.
This chapter unearths a point out in Rajkumar Hirani's just lately launched biopic of the Munna Bhai MBBS actor, Sanju. Baljeet Parmar, who's decided to not watch Sanju, dismissed the movie as an attempt "to make a quick buck".
In a Facebook post, he wrote, "The so-called bio pics are tailored to suite the man or the woman they are based on. They are not to inspire the audiences but are there to create a smokescreen to blur their minds."
Parmar added, "The use or misuse of drugs, sleeping with women, branding media as an addictive potion, finding faults with system or society, willingly and knowingly Indulge in criminal activity, showing no remorse for your past actions, playing the sympathy card and crying victim, if that is what SANJU is about, I do not regret my decision of staying away from cinema halls."
Earlier, the journalist had printed how he were given whiff of the fact that Sanjay Dutt's identify had cropped up whilst investigating the 1993 serial blasts in Mumbai.
His source, a senior IPS officer, used to be prepared to divulge best that the individual below the scanner used to be an "MP ka beta". While Parmar had a powerful feeling that the MP in question used to be Sunil Dutt, he could no longer ascertain the news as all senior officers involved in the investigation kept their lips firmly sealed.
As a last-ditch effort, Parmar "tried a bluff". "I called an IPS officer at Mahim and said: 'Suna hai aapne kisi MP ke bete ko uthaya hai (I have heard that you have picked up an MP's son)'. The answer slipped out. 'No, we have not, as he is shooting abroad,' he replied. There it was - my big story. It had to be Sanjay Dutt."
Sanju: Ranbir Kapoor debuts in Rs 200 crore club with Sanjay Dutt biopic
01:10
This person will reportedly not watch 'Sanju'
Reviewed by Kailash
on
July 07, 2018
Rating: