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‘Botched-Up Trap’: Supreme Court Acquits Man in Bribery Case, Citing Glaring Contradictions & Upholding Double Presumption of Innocence Under P.C. Act, 1988 - 2025-07-18

Subject : Criminal Law - White Collar Crimes

‘Botched-Up Trap’: Supreme Court Acquits Man in Bribery Case, Citing Glaring Contradictions & Upholding Double Presumption of Innocence Under P.C. Act, 1988

Supreme Today News Desk

‘Botched-Up Trap, Fabricated Case’: Supreme Court Acquits Insurance Officer in 25-Year-Old Bribery Case

New Delhi: The Supreme Court has acquitted a 74-year-old former insurance officer in a 1999 bribery case, overturning a High Court conviction and restoring a trial court's acquittal. The bench of Justice Ahsanuddin Amanullah and Justice S.V.N. Bhatti sharply criticized the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) for what it termed "at best a case of a botched-up trap with serious lapses" and "at its worst, an example of fabrication and attempted frame-up."

The Court ruled that the prosecution failed to prove the demand and acceptance of a bribe beyond a reasonable doubt, highlighting glaring contradictions in the evidence and emphasizing the "double presumption of innocence" that protects an accused who has been acquitted by a trial court.


Case Background

The case dates back to 1999 when M. Sambasiva Rao , then an Assistant Administrative Officer at United India Insurance Company in Guntur, was accused of conspiring with his Regional Manager (accused no. 2, now deceased) and his brother (accused no. 3) to demand a Rs. 40,000 bribe. The alleged demand was made to T. Kotireddy (PW1) for settling an Rs. 8 lakh Janata Personal Accident policy claim filed by his niece.

Following a complaint, the CBI laid a trap. However, Rao did not travel to meet the Regional Manager as planned; his brother went instead and was caught in the trap with the alleged bribe money.

In 2005, the Special CBI Court in Visakhapatnam acquitted all accused, citing insufficient and contradictory evidence. However, in 2015, the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad reversed this decision, convicting Rao and his brother and sentencing them to one year of rigorous imprisonment under the Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988, and for criminal conspiracy. The present appeal was filed by Rao against this conviction.


Key Arguments

Appellant's Submissions: - Senior Advocate Jayant Bhushan , for the appellant, argued that the High Court erred in overturning a well-reasoned acquittal, especially when two views on the evidence were possible. - He contended that Rao had already processed the claim file, so there was no "official favour" pending with him. - Bhushan pointed to severe contradictions in the prosecution's case, including: - The shirt seized during the trap was described as "white" but the one produced in court was "moss-coloured." - The CBI's lead investigator (PW12) denied the presence of the Superintendent of Police (SP) at the trap, but the SP's official tour diary proved his participation. - Phenolphthalein powder was allegedly recovered from a whisky box, though the pre-trap report never mentioned applying it there.

State's Submissions: - Additional Solicitor General Vikramjit Banerjee, for the State, defended the High Court's judgment, stating it had the power to re-appreciate perverse findings of the trial court. - He argued that the bribe was demanded for "liaisoning" with the Regional Manager to ensure the final settlement of the claim. - The State maintained that minor inconsistencies in witness testimonies are natural and should not discredit the entire case.


Supreme Court's Analysis: Glaring Contradictions and Botched Investigation

The Supreme Court, after a "threadbare" analysis of the evidence, sided with the appellant, finding that the prosecution's case was built on a shaky foundation of "inferences and conjectures."

The bench highlighted three "glaring contradictions" that it said "shake the foundations of the prosecution case and render its death knell":

  1. The SP's Concealed Presence: The Court found the investigator's denial of the SP's presence at the trap, which was conclusively falsified by the SP's own tour diary, to be a serious blow to the credibility of the trap proceedings. The judgment noted this "raises serious doubts on the veracity of the trap proceedings."

  2. The 'Moss-Coloured' White Shirt: The Court was "quite dumb-founded" by the High Court's explanation that a white shirt seized in 1999 could have turned "moss-coloured" over time due to dust. It termed the High Court's reasoning an "incredulous and irrational leap."

  3. The Phantom Phenolphthalein Powder: The recovery of phenolphthalein powder from the whisky box, when it was never mentioned as having been applied in the pre-trap report, was dismissed as being based on "conjectural assumptions."

The judgment underscored the principle laid down in Neeraj Dutta v State (NCT of Delhi) , which requires the prosecution to prove the demand and acceptance of illegal gratification as a sine qua non for conviction under the Prevention of Corruption Act. The Court found the allegation of demand itself to be "shrouded in a cloud of dubiety."

In a crucial passage, the Court observed:

"This is, to be charitable to the investigative agency, at best a case of a botched-up trap with serious lapses committed by the investigative agency... At its worst, this case is an example of fabrication and attempted frame-up. Whatever be the truth of the matter, the fact remains that in either scenario, benefit of doubt has to flow to the appellant."


Final Verdict

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, setting aside the High Court's conviction and restoring the trial court's acquittal. The bench reiterated the established legal principle that when two views are possible, the view favouring the accused must be adopted.

"It would be unsafe to uphold the conviction of the appellant in any view of the matter," the Court concluded, acquitting M. Sambasiva Rao of all charges.

#SupremeCourt #Acquittal #PreventionOfCorruptionAct

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