Chandigarh, July 12 -- The Punjab and Haryana high court (HC) has directed the Rupnagar chief medical officer to provide complete medical records of Mohali-based realtor Jarnail Singh Bajwa, an accused in multiple property fraud cases, amid allegations that he is receiving VIP treatment at a hospital instead of being kept in jail. One Arvinder Singh had filed a petition in June claiming a threat to his life. He had told court that he had bought a property from Bajwa and after dispute, he has not only been pursuing his own case but also been assisting other complainants in legal proceedings against Bajwa, who is associated with multiple residential projects under the name Sunny Enclave, encompassing various phases and spread over 100 acres of land in Kharar. He had further told court that Bajwa, through unidentified individuals, is threatening him and these threats were allegedly conveyed during his confinement in Rupnagar jail. The petitioner further claimed that Bajwa, who is implicated in 60 other criminal cases, has been receiving preferential treatment from police authorities and granted access to mobile phones by cops accompanying him at the hospital. "..he is using the mobile phones of his personal driver and staff to make threatening calls to the petitioner through unknown persons," the court was told adding that since March 2025, he has not been taken into police custody or lodged in jail. Instead, he has been unlawfully kept at the civil hospital under the pretext of medical treatment, despite the absence of any serious health condition that would necessitate hospitalisation, the petitioner further alleged. Taking a serious view of the allegations, the court directed the petitioner to submit these allegations through a sworn affidavit and supply material substantiating the allegations. The affidavit must include the mobile numbers suspected to have been used by him, either while in jail or during his stay at the hospital, for threat calls, the court further directed. "..State counsel is instructed to file an affidavit from the chief medical officer, civil hospital, Rupnagar, or any other senior most officer in the hospital's administrative hierarchy. The affidavit must provide complete medical records of respondent No.3 (Bajwa), including details of his ailments, treatment administered, and vital statistics such as blood pressure and blood-sugar levels that may have been managed at the hospital," the bench of justice Sandeep Moudgil observed while fixing next date of hearing for July 14....