
Table of Contents
Pune Porsche accident: Death of two guards: father of the teenage murderer detain by police till May 24
The father of a 17-year-old boy who murdered two individuals during racing a Porsche car at a high rate of speed was arrested and sent to a police detention center until May 24 by a court in Pune.
As reported by ANI the police demanded to take interim custody of the seven days of the detained Pakistani teenager’s father. Still, the Court was more moderate and allowed the police to take the children into custody for only 2 days.
He tried to escape the police force on Tuesday and was arrested. The boy’s father has subsequently been arraigned on charges under Section 75 of the JJ Act, 2015 that deals with anyone who wilfully neglects a child or exposes the child to mental or physical illnesses and diseases.
On Tuesday, the Court had sent Cosie hotel’s owner Naman Bhutada, bar counter manager Sachin Katkar and Blak club manager Sachin Sangle to police custody till May 24 for violating section 67 making alcoholic liquor, intoxicating drink under IPC for serving alcohol to the juvenile before the accident.
The incident had occurred on May 19, when the 17-year-old had rammed a Porsche car into a motorcycle in the Kalyani Nagar area, resulting in the deaths of two people.
It emerged that before the accident he was a frequent visitor to a local pub where he was taking alcohol with his friends.
The minor was charged with reckless driving, hazard to human life, causing injury by endangering safety, causing death by negligence, and fines as per the sections 304A, 279, 337, 338 of theIPC and Section 3, 49 of the MV Act 1988 of Maharashtra.
He was also charged with Section 304 of the Indian Penal Code that leads to culpable homicide not amounting to murder and was produced in the court and needs to be tried as an adult.
JJB in Pune, Maharashtra decided to release a juvenile on bail on a condition that he writes a 300-word essay on different aspects of traffic violations after reading all traffic rules at the Regional Transport Office.
The Board also recommended that the parents of the minor should ensure that the minor will not again engage himself in the commission of such offences and should keep him away from the erring groups.