Mumbai: refusing to give punishment to the 30-year-old Zimbabwe citizen who searched for HIV-positive reasons, the Special NDPS court on Friday was punished and sentenced him for 10 years in a tight prison after he was arrested by NCB.
With 946 grams of cocaine hidden in his stomach and rectum at 78 oval pellets, on his arrival in the city from the UAE in 2015.
The court holds the confiscated conveyor goods will certainly be circulated among the actual part of society but for the arrest on time.
by officers.
“Consider the nature of violations and threats that cause health and social security of the community, especially the youth, and its country’s effects on the economic, cultural and social foundation of the community, it does not appear in this court.
The defendant deserves a consideration that is much lighter and liberal,” said the judge Special Joslkar.
The woman was also fined Rs 2 lakh.
It was a prosecution case that NCB acted based on confidential information received on November 23, 2015.
It was said the next morning, the woman was identified and stopped when she passed customs with luggage.
After the search was made, nothing was burdensome found in it.
NCB then asked him to accompany them for a thorough medical examination at a government hospital.
Furthermore, after getting permission from the Magistrate Court, the woman was taken to the hospital J J.
Prosecution said during his medical examination, a doctor’s doctor told the officer that two oval-shaped pellets recovered from the female rectum.
Suspecting more pellets, he was hospitalized for the “release or removal of their surgery.
The prosecution was subsequently conveyed that between 24 and 29 November 2015, the woman “released” a total of 78 pellets through its rectum “randomly and intermittently” which was cleaned and stored under nurse prisoners and staff keys.
On December 2, it was handed over to NCB.
Allegedly that pellets cut open and substances such as white are restored from each.
Drug detection kit detects substances into cocaine, the prosecution delivered.
While NDPS acts qualifying 2 grams of cocaine because of small quantities, quantified commercial counts at 100 grams or more.
The woman in her defense had claimed 78 pellets hidden in her body by her friend after she was drunk to her and she didn’t know about their presence.
However, the court, said, “Passing throughout the evidence added by witnesses, it did not create a way of doubt about the fact that the defendant had real knowledge of the nature of the substance stored.
The rival defense accused by the defendant did not inspire confidence.”