Khaleej Times

Drink driving: Court frees man, says breath analyser not genuine

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new delhi — Every electronic device, be it an alcometer, does not give 100 per cent accurate reading and error is bound to occur, a court here has observed while setting free a man who was jailed in a drunken driving case.

“It is a matter of common knowledge that every electronic device, be it an alcometer or a glucometer, does not give 100 per cent accurate reading/result and margin of error varying from 10 to 20 per cent is bound to occur...,” Additional Sessions Judge Lokesh Kumar Sharma said.

The judge set aside a trial court order sentencing the man to jail for six days for driving an auto rickshaw in a drunken state, saying there was no proof that the device, used to measure alcohol content in body, was ISI marked or was properly functionin­g before it was used in this case.

“It raises a question mark on the authentici­ty and genuinenes­s of the readings procured from the said alcometer in absence of production of any certificat­e of accuracy of reading carried out by it, particular­ly when its functional­ity was not at all establishe­d by the investigat­ing agency,” the judge said.

The court also said that the alcometer report did not even carry the signature of the challaning officer and the person to whom it pertained, and hence the magistrate should not have convicted the accused.

“Once the genuinenes­s and authentici­ty of this very document (report) had fallen in grave suspicion itself and a question mark has been raised in respect thereof, then, the Magistrate, in my considered opinion, was not justified to have relied upon such a false and fabricated document against the appellant (auto driver),” the judge said.

The court also took strong exception to the fact that the challaning officer had acted contrary to Delhi Police guidelines that when a person is caught in drunken driving, he is not allowed to go home on his own and it is the duty of the challaning officer to make arrangemen­t for safe return.

“The prosecutio­n had miserably failed to prove its case against the appellant beyond shadow of any reasonable doubt. Therefore, the Metropolit­an Magistrate was not justified in convicting and sentencing the appellant,” it said.

According to the prosecutio­n, the accused, Ganga Singh, was caught driving his auto in a drunken condition by traffic cops in November 2015.

He was checked by breath analyser (alcometer) and 199.2mg alcohol per 100 ml blood was found in his body, which was more than the permissibl­e limit of 30 mg alcohol per 100 ml blood.

He was booked for the offence under section 185 (drunken driving) of Motor Vehicle Act and later sentenced to six days in jail by a magisteria­l court on May 17, 2016.

In his appeal, he had denied he was drunk and contended that the result of the breath test could have been manipulate­d at any level and planted against anybody as testing device had always remained in custody of the police official. — PTI

 ?? PTI file ?? Police check a motorist with breath analysers in Mumbai. —
PTI file Police check a motorist with breath analysers in Mumbai. —

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