
New Delhi: Chief Justice Dipak Misra has rejected a senior lawyer's suggestion to bar the media from reporting the courtroom drama on Friday, where a large number of lawyers reacted angrily to advocate Prashant Bhushan's unsubstantiated allegations against the CJIand sought contempt of court proceedings against him.
The CJI said, "I believe, all of us believe, in the freedom of press. I am always in support of freedom of speech and expression and the right of media to report proceedings accurately. I do not favour restraining the press in any matter. A similar prayer was made before me when I was a judge of Madhya Pradesh high court during the hearing of a very sensitive matter. I had outright refused to restrain the media from reporting the proceedings. Press must have its freedom."
Members of the five-judge bench, especially Justice Arun Mishra, told Bhushan that he had made unsubstantiated allegations for which he was liable for contempt of court proceedings.
Not new to the court initiating contempt of court proceedings against him — one is pending in the SC against him for alleging seven years ago that most former CJIs were corrupt — Bhushan tried to make his submission.
But his voice was drowned as a large number of lawyers spoke in unison accusing him and his band of lawyers of attempting to terrorise judges through wild allegations.
Frustrated by his voice being drowned in the cacophony, Bhushan stormed out of the courtroom. After this, Supreme Court Advocates on Record Association office-bearer Gopal Singh suggested to the bench to treat the proceedings in camera and restrain the media from reporting it. The CJI immediately shot down the suggestion.
The bench also rejected a suggestion from former Supreme Court Bar Association office-bearer Ranji Thomas to constitute a full court and place both the petitions, which alleged judge-middleman nexus in grant of favourable orders to undeserving private medical colleges, before it