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Yes, the suicide note is the most crucial evidence in the investigation into any suicide case, according to some senior investigators.
On Tuesday morning, former bureaucrat BK Bansal and his son Yogesh Bansal were found hanging from the ceiling fan in their apartment in Delhi. The police recovered two separate suicide notes from the crime scene, one written by Bansal and the other by his son.
In the suicide note, as reported by The Quint, Bansal raises serious allegations against the CBI. He not only mentions the names of the CBI officials who allegedly tortured his wife and daughter but also demands an investigation against them.
The suicide note is enough ground for the police to register a case under Dying Declaration-Section 32(1) of the Indian Evidence Act and abetment to suicide — Section 306 of Indian Penal Code.
So far, an inquest proceeding as per the CrPC is being conducted by the Delhi police and an internal inquiry has been initiated by the CBI.
According to legal experts, the police should have registered an FIR under the abetment of suicide (Section 306 of CrPC) to begin the probe. What does Section 306 of the CrPC say?
The apex court, in its decision in PV Radhakrishna vs State of Karnataka held that the principle on which a dying declaration is admitted in evidence is indicated in legal maxim, nemo morturus procsumitur mentri (A man will not meet his maker with a lie in his mouth). Information lodged by a person, who died subsequently, relating to the cause of his death, is admissible as evidence under this clause.
This is what the Dying Declaration-Section 32 (1) of Indian Evidence Act says:
The suicide note is the most powerful evidence to convict the CBI officials mentioned in the note. However, the authenticity of the note and the circumstance in which the suicide was committed has to be investigated.
The suicide note can be taken as his dying declaration after it is verified.
In the note, Bansal says, “(My wife and daughter) did not commit suicide, but were murdered by the CBI.”
Bansal was arrested by the CBI for allegedly accepting a bribe of Rs 9 lakh from a pharmaceutical company. His wife and daughter committed suicide in July, as result of which he was granted interim bail. On 30 August, he was out on a regular bail.
Interestingly, according to sources in the CBI, it is very unusual that the sensitive post of a DIG in the Anti-corruption department of CBI is handed over to an IRS officer. DIG Sanjiv Gautam, who has been named in the suicide note, is an IRS officer and was posted as a customs officer before he joined the CBI.
Also, Rekha Sangwan, one of the two lady CBI officers named in the note, had faced a departmental inquiry for accepting bribe. She was given a clean chit later.
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