Bombay High Court Orders Rs 25,000 Compensation for Illegal Arrest of 70-Year-Old Man The Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court ruled on Monday that a police officer violated constitutional safeguards by arresting a 70-year-old businessman without following mandatory legal procedures. The court directed the state government to pay Rs 25,000 as compensation for the infringement on the petitioner’s personal liberty. The decision was made in a case involving a 70-year-old resident of Gandhi Nagar, who was arrested by officers from Ambazari police station. The division bench, comprising Justices Urmila Joshi Phalke and Nivedita Mehta, found that the arrest failed to comply with Supreme Court guidelines and statutory safeguards under the Code of Criminal Procedure. The court held that the action constituted a breach of Article 21 of the Constitution, which guarantees the right to life and personal liberty. The petitioner, who was arrested in a case filed by his daughter-in-law for allegedly outraging her modesty and other offenses, challenged the arrest through his counsel, PS Tiwari. He argued that despite responding to a police notice, he was detained without adherence to due process. The court examined the case records and noted that while a notice was issued to the petitioner, it did not specify the grounds for arrest. There was also no arrest memorandum or proper documentation, nor was there evidence that relatives were informed of the arrest. These procedural lapses violated key Supreme Court rulings that mandate transparency and accountability in law enforcement. Citing precedents from the apex court, the bench emphasized that arrests in cognizable offenses punishable up to seven years cannot be made automatically.#bombay_high_court #nagpur_bench #urmila_joshi_phalke #nivedita_mehta #gandhi_nagar
