IT STARTED ABOUT NINE YEARS AGO
“It all started in 1999. Local police used to trouble vendors by demanding money and beating up those who refused. When I tried to intervene, they locked me up and beat me. That day I decided that I would not take it lying down. I got a tape recorder and taped their voices. Then I appeared before the DCP, who suspended the two erring policemen,” Prakash, 33, said about his first victory against the system gone wrong.
98 COPS WERE SUSPENDED RECENTLY
Prakash’s work recently came to light as 98 policemen were suspended by Delhi Police after his spy camera filmed them extorting money from the operators of the privately-owned fleet of “killer” Blueline buses. The cops were seeking bribes to release the buses impounded for rash driving or after an accident.
HE BORROWED CAMERA FROM FRIEND
Prakash carried a spy camera, given to him by his friend, in his cap, and pen to film the errant traffic policemen after a bus operator approached him. The tape was submitted before the Delhi High Court.
POLICEMEN TRIED TO KILL ME
“I had a hand-held video camera in 2003. I shot around 300 policemen taking money from bootleggers. But police came to know about it and they even tried to kill me. They took away the films,” said Prakash sitting in his office in Shyam Vihar in Najafgarh, southwest Delhi.
Prakash has also filmed policemen at check posts taking money from truck drivers to allow them passage. This led to the suspension of some 25 policemen.