Accused statement has limited role: HC

Nagpur: The Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court has ruled that a co-accused can not be convicted solely on the basis of the accused`s statement as it has a limited role in any litigation. "The statement of the co-accused can always be used as an aid if the accused is tried primarily on other […]

Nagpur: The Nagpur bench of the Bombay High Court has ruled that a co-accused can not be convicted solely on the basis of the accused`s statement as it has a limited role in any litigation. "The statement of the co-accused can always be used as an aid if the accused is tried primarily on other evidences.

"However, his statement(s) can not be a foundation for convicting the accused when it is only the sole material," the single bench of Justice Ambadas Joshi observed while granting a relief from prosecution to a co-accused booked for offences including theft, cheating and forgery.