The Supreme Court has ordered criminal proceedings against a police constable accused of joining both the Bihar and Jharkhand Police forces under different names and identities. The court described the case as a serious example of fraud and impersonation within public service.
A bench comprising Justices Ahsanuddin Amanullah and R. Mahadevan restored the constable’s dismissal and sharply criticized the misuse of public employment systems.
How The Fraud Allegedly Happened
According to court records, the constable originally joined the Jharkhand Police in May 2005 under the name Ranjan Kumar.
In December 2007:
Investigations reportedly found:
- Same photographs used in both applications
- Matching biometric and fingerprint records
- Similar personal details across documents
The inquiry eventually concluded that both identities belonged to the same person.
Supreme Court’s Strong Observation
The Supreme Court made unusually strong remarks while restoring the dismissal order.
The bench stated:
The judges further warned that:
- Police personnel are responsible for enforcing the law
- Fraudulent entry into police service damages institutional credibility
- Fabricated credentials undermine the rule of law itself
The court said allegations including:
- Fraud
- Impersonation
- Forgery
- Cheating
- Unauthorized absence from duty
…were serious enough to justify criminal prosecution beyond departmental action.
High Court Relief Overturned
The case reached the Supreme Court after the Jharkhand High Court had earlier granted relief to the constable by setting aside his dismissal.
However, the Supreme Court overturned that decision and reinstated the disciplinary action taken by Jharkhand Police authorities.
The apex court also directed authorities in both states to consider initiating formal criminal proceedings against the accused constable.
Why This Case Matters
The case has drawn national attention because it exposes potential weaknesses in:
- Police recruitment verification systems
- Identity authentication processes
- Inter-state employment databases
- Background verification mechanisms
Experts say the incident highlights the growing importance of:
- Biometric verification
- Digital recruitment systems
- Centralized police databases
- Cross-state employee authentication
Bigger Concern: Trust In Law Enforcement
The Supreme Court’s remarks also reflect a deeper institutional concern:
If individuals responsible for enforcing laws themselves enter service through deception, public trust in policing and governance can weaken significantly.
The court’s strong language suggests the judiciary now wants stricter accountability in government recruitment systems — especially in sensitive departments like police forces.
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