Search Results for "Section 489A IPC"

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Bombay High Court Upholds Conviction for Counterfeiting Currency Notes but Acquits Some Accused of Criminal Conspiracy. Court holds that possession and use of counterfeit currency notes without proof of conspiracy does not attract Section 120B IPC.

The case involves two appeals arising from Sessions Case No.126/2006 decided by the Additional Sessions Judge, Ahmednagar. The first appeal was filed ...

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High Court of Bombay at Aurangabad Acquits Appellants in Counterfeit Currency Case Due to Lack of Evidence and Procedural Lapses. Conviction under Section 489B r/w 34 IPC set aside as prosecution failed to prove possession or use of counterfeit currency notes.

The case involves an appeal against the conviction of Prabhakar Patlola and Venkatesh Chanda under Section 489B read with Section 34 of the Indian Pen...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Accused in Counterfeit Currency Case Due to Lack of Evidence and Non-Compliance with Mandatory Provisions. Failure to Join Independent Panch Witnesses and Inconsistencies in Seizure and Recovery Cast Doubt on Prosecution Case Under Sections 489B and 489C IPC.

The appellant, Shaikh Nazir Shaikh Failu, was convicted by the trial court for offences under Sections 489B and 489C of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (I...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Accused in MCOCA Kidnapping Case Due to Lack of Evidence of Demand for Ransom. Conviction under Section 364A IPC and MCOCA set aside as prosecution failed to prove that the victim was kidnapped for ransom.

The appellants, original accused nos. 1 to 4, were convicted by the Special Judge under MCOC Case No. 15 of 2005 for offences under Section 364A, 365,...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Six Accused in NDPS Case Due to Non-Compliance with Sections 42 and 50. Failure to Record Reasons for Search and Lack of Independent Witnesses Renders Recovery of Contraband Illegal.

The case involves six appellants who were convicted by the trial court under the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 (NDPS Act) for p...

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Bombay High Court Quashes FIR Against Accused in Counterfeit Currency Case — Lack of Mens Rea and Knowledge of Counterfeit Notes. Petitioner deposited demonetized currency notes in bank; five notes found counterfeit but no evidence she knew they were fake, essential for Section 489B IPC.

The petitioner, Sanskriti Jayantilal Salia, filed a criminal writ petition under Article 226 of the Constitution of India and Section 482 of the Code ...

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Bombay High Court Acquits Accused in Counterfeit Currency Case Due to Lack of Mens Rea. Possession of Single Counterfeit Note Without Knowledge or Intent to Use as Genuine Not Sufficient for Conviction Under Sections 489B and 489C IPC.

The appellant, Mohammed Shabbir, was convicted by the Additional Sessions Judge, Mumbai, for offences under Sections 489B (using as genuine a forged o...