The magazine created a fictitious London-based
arms manufacturing company called 'West End International'. Investigative journalists from the magazine would get in touch with junior officers of the Indian defence establishment and move upwards. The operation started with Senior Section Officer P. Sashi Menon who was posted in the
Ministry of Defence. After getting some monetary incentive, P. Sashi Menon took the team to Brigadier Anil Sehgal’s house in New Delhi. Sehgal was then the Deputy Director in Directorate General of Ordnance and Supply (DGOS) in the
Indian Army, an important army procurement post. Sashi Menon and Sehgal provided the
Tehelka team with information about the defence products being but the army and instructions on how to proceed in order to sell their products. Brigadier Sehgal demanded to be entertained in a five-star hotel to which the team agreed. He also brought in Lt. Colonel Sharma, who was an army officer posted in procurement section of the
Indian Air Force. procurement section. After the meeting, Brigadier Sehgal demanded Rs. 200,000 to give documents related to the procurement of hand-held
thermal cameras and other equipment that the company might be interested in supplying to the Indian Army. After accepting the money he also advised on how to proceed in the matter of bidding for the hand-held thermal cameras. During the conversation, Brigadier Sehgal said that the company would have to pay to everyone and some percentage would also reach the then Defence Minister
George Fernandes. P. Sashi Menon also provided confidential documents related to the procurement of
ammunition, tubes, clothing and helicopters. On 26 November 2000, the team was introduced to Deepak Gupta, the son of
Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS)
trustee R. K. Gupta. Deepak Gupta assured that he would help the UK based company bag the project and talked about his influence in the government. In the subsequent meetings he elaborated on his functioning and said that he worked from the
Prime Minister's Office (PMO). The team then met R. K. Gupta, the RSS trustee and a big defence middleman. He was quite vocal about his relationship with the Prime Minister
Atal Bihari Vajpayee and
Lal Krishna Advani and said that both of them were tenants at his properties. He had also helped establish the RSS headquarters in 1967 in Jhandewala,
Delhi. He assured the team that he will get their work done and will pay the bribes on their behalf to the Defence Secretary, Joint Secretary, Under Secretary, BJP treasurer
Ved Prakash Goyal, and president Bangaru Laxman. He did not want to involve
Brajesh Mishra as his price was rupees one
crore. On 23 December 2000, journalists posing as representatives of the arms manufacturing company held their first meeting with the then BJP chief Bangaru Laxman. They then met him several times over the period of one week and promised to compensate him for his recommendation to the
Defence Ministry on the supply of hand-held thermal imagers. On 1 January 2001, Laxman accepted one
lakh rupees at the BJP’s office for pursuing their proposal. On 7 January 2001, the final meeting held between the fake representatives and Laxman. == Bribes paid ==