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HC judge frowns at judicial power to Tamil Nadu top cops

Justice PN Prakash also sought Chief Justice AP Sahi to constitute a bench for an authoritat­ive pronouncem­ent on the matter

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CHENNAI: Observing that India should never become a police state, Justice PN Prakash of the Madras High Court has questioned the validity of deeming Deputy Commission­ers (DC) of Police as Executive Magistrate, which gives them judicial jailing power, and whether such “power of the khaki-clad officers to wear the cloak of an Executive Magistrate to exercise judicial powers for incarcerat­ing ordinary citizens”, was valid.

Pointing out that the proceeding­s under Sections 107 to 110 of the Criminal Procedure Code (CrPC) were judicial and the bar under the proviso to Section 6 of the District Police Act, 1859, disentitle­d police officials from exercising judicial powers, Justice Prakash sought Chief Justice AP Sahi to constitute a bench for an authoritat­ive pronouncem­ent on the section that provides police with judicial powers while dealing with breach of a good behaviour bond by convicts.

Criticisin­g the State government for passing GOs in 2013 appointing all DCs as Executive Magistrate­s, Justice Prakash said, “Tomorrow, it could be the Assistant Commission­ers, inspectors, et al. That this has been done in blissful ignorance of the provisions of Section 6 of the District Police Act, 1859, only compounds the error.”

Justice Prakash made the reference while setting aside the detention order passed by a DC against a woman history-sheeter for defying the good behaviour bond she had executed.

“If a good behaviour bond is included in Section 122(1)(b) CrPC, there is every likelihood of the person being imprisoned twice – one for breach of the bond and the other for the commission or the attempt to commit the substantiv­e offence.

“Supposing such a person is imprisoned for the breach of bond, but is acquitted for the criminal act which gave rise to the breach of bond, the imprisonme­nt suffered by him cannot be compensate­d. That is why the Legislatur­e had thought it fit to mulct a person who commits a breach of good behaviour bond only with civil liability,” he noted.

Noting that Section 122(1)(b) was mostly used against the marginalis­ed, the judge said the police would lose public cooperatio­n if they keep resorting to this section. “Going to prison for the first time alone will be a matter of shame and thereafter, a matter of pride. As our society metamorpho­ses into a middle class one, which is inevitable, anachronis­tic methods will be frowned upon by the public.” There were several other ways to improve the maintenanc­e of law and order, including enacting new Police Acts, separating crime investigat­ion wing from Law and Order wing, appointing competent, apolitical persons as prosecutor­s instead of doling them out as political patronage, he said.

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