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Under the Excise Act and the Firearms Act. A thirdĬIA official whom the IB has implicated in the case is still in DelhiĪnd IB sources say that he will also be told to get out once there is Weatherbee, theĬIA man named in Larkins' confession who was given 24 hours to leave theĬountry after the spy ring was busted in late November. India in 1982 and handed over the network to Harry L. He in turn recruited the Larkins brothers who Was said that he was recruited by a CIA operative who was an attache at Left India five months ago and has obviously slipped out of the net. The spy ring was much bigger and included another air vice-marshal who The Larkins' confession is being kept a close secret, it is learnt that In the US and Gill has made frequent trips there in the past few years. His arrest, had been living with an American woman. He was divorced from his German wife and at the time of His American connections went deeper than mereĬommercial ones. Jasbir Singh had also been under IB surveillance at his posh Sunder Was negotiating for various defence contracts. The deal and though he denied it to India Today, he admitted that he India Today had met both Gill and Singh last year in the course of investigations into the Centurion tank deal when the tanks got to South Africa.ĭefence Ministry sources had indicated that Gill had been involved in His intimate knowledge of tanks and his social and army connections made him an ideal candidate for the job of 'liaison officer', the euphemistic title sported by others of his ilk who are to be seen haunting the corridors of the ministries. Jasbir Singh was married to the daughter of Lt-General Harnarain Singh and was a course-mate of the present deputy chief of the army, Lt-General Hirday Kaul. Gill was a product of the exclusive Doon School which, through the old boy network, gave him access to some well-placed people. Gill's company was registered under the name of EMGEE International.Ī smiling Jasbir Singh: Double lives High Connections:


Gill, a former employee of Hindustan Lever, had started dealing in sugar, fertilisers and condiments from 1972 - he was involved in a multi-crore sugar deal scandal concerning a Swiss firm in 1976 - and later became an agent for a number of western arms merchants after Jasbir Singh, a well connected former Armoured Corps officer joined him. His 10-page confession led to the arrest of two more members of the spy ring, Jaspal Singh Gill, a Delhi-based businessman and his employee, Lt-Colonel Jasbir Singh (retd). When shown the details of the surveillance, Frank Larkins quickly confessed. But even so, they had enough evidence to nail the two. But Larkins's intended flight to Australia last month forced the IB to act earlier.
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It was then decided to increase surveillance and pounce only when the manuals were in the process of being passed on to the CIA personnel.
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On April 5, Larkins returned the manual along with a preliminary payment of Rs 10,000. Singh was instructed to pass on a classified manual on electronic equipment for the MiG-23 aircraft which he did when Larkins visited him in his office at Air Headquarters on April 3. Immediately, the matter was referred to the prime minister and the cabinet secretary. On March 24, Singh informed Raghavendran that the approach had been made and that Larkins had promised him Rs 30,000 for each manual. Singh was approached by Kenneth Larkins on March 20 and asked whether he would consider passing on classified manuals of Soviet MiGs in the Indian Air Force (IAF) inventory. He was a top-rated fighter pilot who had served under Air Vice-Marshal Larkins and he made it discreetly known that he was frustrated at a desk job and disgruntled with the air force.įirst Approach: Sure enough, the bait proved too tempting to resist. Raghavendran, a likely target for any espionage activity.

Group Captain Jasjit Singh, an air force intelligence officer, had been planted in the office of the Assistant Chief of Air Staff (Operations), Air Vice-Marshal S. In March, the IB finally had the proof they wanted. The Larkins brothers must have known that they were under suspicion but greed soon got the better of caution. The IB surveillance team had at least seven opportunities since then to arrest the Larkinses in the act of clandestinely meeting US diplomats but each time their attempts were thwarted by the fact that the diplomats were driving souped-up Fiats belonging to the US Embassy which easily outpaced the IB's Ambassadors.
