That’s what the Additional Chief Metropolitan Magistrate VS Patil said in his order while giving the verdict on the 11-year-old case
Salman Khan knew the possible consequences of his rash and negligent driving. He knew that he could cause death but did not intend to kill anyone – these are the words of the additional chief metropolitan magistrate VS Patil who said that the 47-year-old superstar should be tried for culpable homicide not amounting to murder. Click here to read more
The Dabangg actor to appeal in Bombay High court against the magistrate’s order
Two days after the Bandra magistrate court accepted the prosecution’s plea to enhance charges against Salman Khan in the 11 year old hit-and-run-case, Salman’s lawyer has decided to challenges the verdict in Bombay High court. Click here to read more
Spelling more trouble for the Dabangg actor, a Mumbai court on Thursday directed that he should be tried for a more serious charge of culpable homicide not amounting to murder, and not death by negligence in the 2002 hit-and-run case
The provision – Section 304 of the Indian Penal Code – attracts a maximum jail sentence of 10 years. Click here to read more
A magistrate court in Mumbai has ordered a detailed enquiry into the allegations of deliberate delay in the Dabangg star’s hit-and-run case trial
When Salman Khan was summoned by the court for the trial of his infamous 2002 hit-and-run case on December 27, 2012, which was incidentally his 47th birthday, the superstar did not turn up. Click here to read more