The Supreme Court on Tuesday cancelled the bails granted to Satyam Computer founder B Ramalinga Raju, his brother B Rama Raju and four others by the Andhra Pradesh High Court in the Rs 14,000-crore accounting fraud.
Hearing the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) plea, a Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Dalveer Bhandari and Deepak Verma cancelled the bails and asked all six persons to surrender by November 8.
Observing that the case involved the biggest scam in the history of India, affecting large number of shareholders, banks and financial institutions, the bench said the High Court order of grating bail cannot be sustained.
The apex court also directed the special court in Hyderabad, which is conducting the trial in the Satyam case, to conclude its proceedings by July next year.
In its petition for cancellation of the bail granted to Raju by the Andhra Pradesh High Court, the investigation agency had said the Satyam founder and had "misused" the bail by meeting one of the witnesses in the case and had allegedly tried to "influence" him.
In response, earlier this month, the bench had issued a notice to Raju, directing him to file his reply on CBI's plea.
The investigation agency had filed the chargsheet running into over 10,000 pages, naming more than 250 witnesses. It was criticised by the court for the same in the last hearing on October 19.
Besides the Raju brothers, the High Court had granted bail to four employees of the IT firm, namely V Srinivas, G Ramakrishna, Venkatapathi Raju and Srisailam.
CBI had approached the apex court on September 13 and said Raju might influence the witnesses, majority of whom were his former employees.
The High Court on August 18 had allowed Raju's bail on the ground that all other accused in the case, including his brother Rama Raju, former Satyam CFO V Srinivas and three other former IT company employees - Ramakrishna, Venkatapathi and Srisailam - were granted bail by it. .
The apex court observed the trial was pending in a special court and detailed reasons for granting bail have not been given by the High Court.
"Normally, the apex court does not interfere in such cases where bail has been granted by the High Court, but the facts of the case indicate demand that we should interfere," the bench said.
Raju, who was arrested on January 9 last year in connection with the biggest corporate fraud in Indian history, and is currently undergoing treatment for liver infection in the state-run Nizam Institute of Medical Sciences, was ordered by the court to appear before the trial court after being discharged.
A special court has been created by the Andhra Pradesh government for the trial in November 2009 and a judge was appointed on February 25.