Section 37 NDPS Act
Subject : Criminal Law - Bail and Anticpatory Bail
In a significant ruling, the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh has dismissed an anticipatory bail application filed by Mohammad Ashraf Dar, a suspect in a large-scale narcotic smuggling operation. The case, involving the recovery of 445 kilograms of poppy straw, underscores the court's strict adherence to the thresholds of the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, even when the accused levels serious counter-allegations against investigating officials.
The case against the petitioner, Mohammad Ashraf Dar, stems from an FIR registered on October 11, 2023, by the Anti Narcotic Task Force (ANTF), Jammu. The investigation surfaced after a mini-oil tanker was intercepted carrying 445 kilograms of poppy straw. Investigations revealed that the tanker had been structurally modified with a concealed cavity, and its identity documentation had been forged to evade detection.
The petitioner, along with several others, was implicated through disclosure statements made by co-accused individuals and corroborated by detailed phone records and digital money trails. Specifically, investigators identified a transfer of ₹1.00 lac between a co-accused and the petitioner, which the prosecution alleges was an advance payment for trafficking services.
Mr. Asif Wani, counsel for the petitioner, argued that the prosecution's case was built on weak evidence and an ulterior motive. A central plank of his argument was that the case against his client was manufactured to facilitate extortion. The petitioner had previously registered an FIR at Police Station, Qazigund, against the then-Investigating Officer, Amandeep Singh, alleging that the officer had demanded large sums of money in exchange for leniency.
The petitioner contended that the current investigation was a retaliatory measure by the police agency and that the bank transaction in question was merely a legitimate business transaction regarding the sale of a vehicle.
The Court rejected the attempt to equate the internal disciplinary or criminal investigation against an officer with the substantive merits of a drug trafficking charge.
Justice Rajnesh Oswal, presiding over the case, clarified that the allegations of extortion—while serious and subject to their own judicial process—do not automatically nullify the evidence collected in the NDPS case. The Court noted that the accused was linked to the crime well before the alleged extortionate demands began, and that the financial trail presented a prima facie case that required deeper investigation into the syndicate’s operations.
The Court held that because the quantity of the seized contraband (445 kg) falls under the "commercial quantity" category, the provisions of Section 37 of the NDPS Act apply in full force, necessitating that the accused prove they are not guilty of the offense to obtain bail—a hurdle the court found the petitioner had failed to clear.
As per the judgment, the Court remarked:
The High Court ultimately found no merit in the petition, observing that the presence of a documented money trail and the severity of the charges precluded the grant of pre-arrest bail. The petition was dismissed, leaving the investigating agency with a green light to continue its crackdown on the drug syndicate. This ruling reinforces the judicial stance that procedural complaints against law enforcement must remain legally distinct from the substantive evidence supporting major criminal charges under the NDPS Act.
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drug trafficking - commercial quantity - pre-arrest bail - money trail - investigation integrity
#NDPSAct #BailJurisprudence
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