
New Delhi [India], September 25 (ANI): Former Mumbai zonal director at the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) and Indian Revenue Service (IRS) officer Sameer Wankhede has filed a defamation suit before the Delhi High Court against Red Chillies Entertainment Pvt Ltd., the production house owned by Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan and his wife, Gauri Khan.
In his suit, Wankhede has sought relief in the nature of a permanent and mandatory injunction, declaration, and damages against the production house, Netflix, and others. He claimed that he has been aggrieved by a false, malicious, and defamatory video in Aryan Khan’s directorial debut show, The Ba**ds of Bollywood*.
“This series disseminates a misleading and negative portrayal of anti-drug enforcement agencies, thereby eroding public confidence in law enforcement institutions,” he stated in his plea. Wankhede further alleged that the series was deliberately conceptualised and executed to malign his reputation in a prejudicial manner, particularly while proceedings involving him and Aryan Khan remain pending before the Bombay High Court and the NDPS Special Court, Mumbai. He contended that the portrayal unfairly targets him at a time when judicial scrutiny is ongoing.
Referring to a particular sequence in the show featuring a character making an obscene gesture after reciting Satyamev Jayate, the suit asserted that the act constitutes a grave and sensitive violation of the provisions of the Prevention of Insults to National Honour Act, 1971, which carries penal consequences under the law.
The lawsuit also claimed that the content of the series contravenes various provisions of the Information Technology Act and the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), as it seeks to outrage national sentiment through the use of obscene and offensive material.
Wankhede has sought damages of ₹2 crore to be donated to the Tata Memorial Cancer Hospital for the treatment of cancer patients. The suit also seeks the court’s direction to restrain the streaming and distribution of the show, along with a declaration of its defamatory nature.
Wankhede maintained that beyond harming his personal reputation, the content undermines faith in institutions responsible for enforcing drug laws. The Delhi High Court is expected to hear the matter soon. (ANI)