Accused seek computer access amid rising e-evidence volumes

Undertrials in several high-profile cases are approaching courts for permission to use computers or laptops to examine voluminous electronic evidence and chargesheets in Indian jails.

In recent years, courts have granted limited access in cases such as the Malegaon 2008 blast and the Elgaar Parishad matter. Accused individuals, including lawyers Surendra Gadling and Arun Ferreira, received permission for supervised computer use in Taloja Jail for one hour twice a week.

In the Antilia terror scare case, dismissed police officer Sachin Waze sought a laptop to review 1,000 terabytes of data collected by the NIA. A May 2024 court order allowed him daily access from 11 am to 4 pm under supervision, though without internet.

Jail authorities have opposed such requests, citing monitoring challenges and the risk of similar demands from other inmates. Earlier precedents include permissions granted to Lieutenant Colonel Prasad Purohit in 2011 and directions from the Madras High Court in 2008 for supervised access in Chennai.

The shift to the BNSS, which mandates video recording of searches, has increased electronic evidence. Wahid Shaikh, acquitted in the Mumbai train blasts case, noted that such access helped identify fabrications in investigations.

관련 기사

A Nashik Road court rejected anticipatory bail plea of Nida Khan, accused in the TCS Nashik case. The prosecution cited digital evidence, seized material and the serious nature of the offence. Khan plans to appeal the decision.

AI에 의해 보고됨

The Supreme Court on June 17 refused bail to Manoj Kumar Singh, who faces multiple cyber fraud cases. Chief Justice Surya Kant described such offenders as parasites preying on citizens.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday stayed criminal proceedings against Ketki Vyas in the 2023 Anand spy camera blackmail case. The order halts the trial pending further hearings. Vyas, a Gujarat Administrative Service officer, faces allegations of secretly filming an ex-collector.

AI에 의해 보고됨

The Centre has informed the Supreme Court that it is considering multi-pronged actions, including temporary debit holds on suspicious accounts, to combat digital arrest frauds. A status report submitted by Attorney General R Venkataramani details the third meeting of the Inter-Departmental Committee (IDC).

 

 

 

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