Deepak mishra ips biography definition
Interview- Delhi Police have proved themselves several times, says Deepak Mishra
What are you doing to increase the strength of the police force?
Recruitment processes to hire more officials are underway.
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Many inspectors complain that they do not get time to go back home and meet their families…
A person who joins the police force is dedicated towards his work and wants to serve the people. During the training process, he is prepared to work in the toughest of situations. Even if I want to say anything to my station house officers, I will not do so through the media.
Junior officials, especially, seem completely overburdened with work…
Whatever the constraints, we are aware of our duties. It is the endeavour of every police official to work according to the expectations of the citizens. Since the process of recruitment is going on, the issue will be
sorted out.
Do you feel that the ‘free registration’ of cases (police have to register each and every complaint that reaches the police station) is overburdening the force?
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‘Free registration’ is aimed at providing justice to each and every victim of a crime. It is our duty to lodge a case and investigate it.
The Darkest Hour
{ONE}
IT WAS COMMON for Jayanta Kumar Das to find bundles of documents on his doorstep in Puri, Odisha. Having spent two decades in the Indian Air Force, Das retired as a sergeant, in 2001, aged 39. He started brokering land deals, which exposed him to a lot of corruption. When the Right to Information Act was passed, in 2005, Das felt enabled. At the turn of the decade he was scratching away at what came to be called the Odisha chit-fund scam. His name began appearing in the press as the scandal surfaced. “So people know me,” Das told me recently. “And because they know that I work honestly, they send me information.” Sometimes his dog chewed documents up before he could open the door to find them.
One bulk of papers arrived by post on 11 August 2016, from the city of Cuttack. These contained the interim report in an inquiry by the Central Bureau of Investigation, carried out on orders of the Orissa High Court, which named public servants who had been indicted for acquiring government land by fraudulent means.
On page 30, under the specifics of lease case number 588/79, Das spotted the name “Deepak Mishra.” He managed to locate a three-decade-old order by the additional district magistrate of Cuttack in State vs Sri Deepak Mishra—lease revision case number 238 of the year 1984. With the stated intention of raising a fodder farm, the defendant had applied to procure about three acres of government land in Cuttack, under a scheme designed to uplift the economically disadvantaged. To prove his eligibility, he swore, in an affidavit, that he came from a Brahmin family that owned no land. This was a lie, and the defendant’s lease on the land was cancelled. The additional district magistrate was “satisfied that the lessee had obtained lease by misrepresentation and fraud.”
The CBI inquiry found that the tehsildar in Cuttack had only corrected the records for the land in January 2012. This meant that for 26 years after the additional distr
Deepak Mishra to be new chief of Delhi Police's admin unit
This was the first such reshuffle after Alok Kumar Vermatook over the reins of the 80,000 strong force.
In the order passed by Lieutenant Governor Najeeb Jung, Special CP Mishra has been made in-charge of Delhi Police's administration department, official sources said.
Mishra, a 1984 batch IPS officer, was one of the top contenders for the police commissioner's post to succeed B S Bassi.
The post of Special CP (administration) is considered second in command in the force, in which Mishra will succeed Vimla Mehra who retired along with Bassi.
Two posts were created for law and order -- now divided into north and south zones.
While P Kamraj, who was serving as Special CP (headquarters), has been made in-charge of Law and Order (South), the charge of law and order (north) has been given to S B K Singh, currently serving as Special CP (security), the sources said.
"This is the first time that two special commissioner-rank officers will take charge of Delhi's law and order, with specific zones assigned to them. Earlier, officers of additional commissioner rank and joint commissioner rank had jointly led law and order department in the force," a source said.
The transfer order also contain names of 15 other senior police officers.
Dipak Misra
45th Chief Justice of India
Dipak Misra (born 3 October 1953) is an Indian jurist who served as the 45th Chief Justice of India from 28 August 2017 till 2 October 2018. He is also former Chief Justice of the Patna High Court and Delhi High Court. He is the nephew of Justice Ranganath Misra, who was the 21st Chief Justice from 1990 to 1991.
Career
Misra enrolled at the Bar on 14 February 1977 and practised at the Orissa High Court and the Service Tribunal. He was first appointed an Additional Judge of the Orissa High Court in 1996. The following year, he was transferred to the Madhya Pradesh High Court, where he was made a Permanent Judge on 19 December 1997. In December 2009, he was appointed Chief Justice of the Patna High Court, serving until May 2010, when he was appointed Chief Justice of the Delhi High Court. He was elevated to the Supreme Court on 10 October 2011.
Misra had a tenure of thirteen months as chief justice at the Supreme Court after being appointed the 45th Chief Justice of India on 28 August 2017 until mandatory retirement at 65 years of age, on 2 October 2018 and was succeeded by Ranjan Gogoi.
Notable judgments
First Information Report
Misra's judgment in the Own Motion vs State case, requiring Delhi Police to upload First Information Reports (FIR) on their website within 24 hours of the FIRs being lodged. This enables the accused to file appropriate applications before the court for redressal of their grievances.
Reservation in promotion
In a case on Reservation in promotion, Justice Misra and Justice Dalveer Bhandari upheld the Allahabad High Court judgement that reservation in promotions can be provided only if there is sufficient data and evidence to justify the need. The bench rejected the Uttar Pradesh government's decision to provide reservation in promotio