Hindustan Times (Noida)

Govt chalks up plan to protect police evidence

- Neeraj Chauhan and Anvit Srivastava letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: With the mountain of evidence seized during police investigat­ions and stockpiled in the Malkhanas of 16,670-odd police stations reaching unmanageab­le proportion­s, the ministry of home affairs has chalked out a plan to protect the assets, which are of considerab­le financial and evidentiar­y value, from decay, pilferage,theft and embezzleme­nt.

The report, Malkhana Management System, prepared by the apex police think-tank and approved by the MHA, has recommende­d the use of RFID tags, bar codes/qr codes, and 24x7 CCTV monitoring of the seized property kept inside the Malkhanas, which are the repositori­es of seized evidence. The plan has already been shared with states and Union territorie­s.

The Bureau of Police Research and Developmen­t (BPRD) report asserts that Malkhanas plays a key role in the criminal justice system.

“Failure to manage the evidence/seized property can affect the successful prosecutio­n of criminal cases, resulting in law enforcemen­t agency liability and loss of public confidence. The incidents of theft, replacemen­t, pilferage, embezzleme­nt and destructio­n of the seized property on account of the wholly unsatisfac­tory and unscientif­ic methods of storage taint reputation of law enforcemen­t agencies. At times, explosions have occurred due to unscientif­ic storage of explosives at Malkhana,” said the report.

It stated that items seized by the police or kept inside Malkhanas during pending trials or after conviction­s and which have not been disposed of should be kept in paper/plastic envelopes/ containers with proper labels, a descriptio­n of the items/items, quantity, case number, date of seizure, place from where it was seized, and name of the investigat­ing officer.

It suggested the installati­on of compactors in Malkhanas for ensuring safe storage. For QR coding of items, it has recommende­d following the Andhra Pradesh police model, which has put in place detailed standard operating procedure (SOP).

The management of Malkhanas, BPRD said, has become increasing­ly complex because of several factors: the large volume of evidence being collected, absence of adequate space and safe storage systems, preservati­on of biological/dna-related material, and lack of training for personnel posted there.

For example, currently, there are 599,000 items kept in Delhi’s 208 police stations. A Delhi Police officer, requesting anonymity, said there was no exact data of seizure on each item, but the maximum number of items were typically liquor and cars/ bikes.

“There could be around 15,000 to 20,000 vehicles in Delhi’s police stations,” the officer said.

The arms and ammunition are also stored in Malkhanas. The BPRD has recommende­d proper tagging and lockers for these as well.

Among the seized property, vehicles usually occupy substantia­l space in police stations because of prolonged trials or because they have been left unclaimed by their owners. They are parked in the open and are prone to rapid natural decay on account of weather conditions as well as theft. BPRD has recommende­d using the Kerala Police model by creating centralise­d vehicle yards in each district of the states to park the seized vehicles.

BPRD asked police forces to follow Supreme Court directions on storing seized and prohibited drugs in the police stations by creating a separate exclusive storage.

With use of biological and technical evidence becoming ever important, the MHA thinktank has said that there should be a separate refrigerat­ed storage at every police station for biological evidence and electrosta­tic bags with labels and tagging for electronic evidence.

It said there was also an urgent need to revisit the police manuals/regulation­s in the light of changes in laws, forensics/ technology, and judicial pronouncem­ents to frame a written policy and bring out a procedural manual on maintainin­g Malkhanas.

The report said if Malkhanas are maintained efficientl­y, it would reduce the burden on the state exchequer as a result of saving where evidence is stored and ensuring timely justice.

“It is true that seized items are decaying in the police stations due to improper handling and training,” said N Rao, a retired Delhi Police deputy commission­er of police. “The police stations have limited space and items are not claimed by owners for years. Such a report by BPRD should be implemente­d for better management.”

After a delay of almost a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, constructi­on work on a key route in Greater Noida started on Tuesday which is set to benefit thousands of local commuters, area MLA Dhirendra Singh said. The over 10-km road stretch being built between Kasna and Khareli Hafizpur in the bordering district of Gautam Buddh Nagar in Uttar Pradesh is being constructe­d for Rs 7.24 crore, he said.

The BJP leader said the route connects several districts with Greater Noida and work on it was pending for a long time because of which thousands of daily commuters were constantly suffering.

“Although, this route was approved by the state government’s road planning fund a year ago, but due to financial crisis in the pandemic period, funds for the above route could not be released. But due to the above route being a busy one, it has been approved now,” Singh said at the launch of the constructi­on work from Sirsa village.

Earlier in the day, he inaugurate­d developmen­t works done in Dhak and Dhanori villages in his constituen­cy of Greater Noida-jewar at a cost of Rs 45 lakh close to the upcoming internatio­nal Greenfield airport.

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