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Shokat Ali Aged-21 Yrs vs Ut Of J&K Through on 5 March, 2026

Jammu & Kashmir High Court

Shokat Ali Aged-21 Yrs vs Ut Of J&K Through on 5 March, 2026

         HIGH COURT OF JAMMU & KASHMIR AND LADAKH
                         AT JAMMU

                        HCP No. 111/2025

                                                     Reserved on:   26.02.2026
                                                     Pronounced on: 05.03.202626.02.2026
                                                     Uploaded on: 05.03.2023.02.2026.2026

                                                     Whether the operative part or full
                                                     judgment is pronounced-Full




Shokat Ali Aged-21 Yrs.                               .....Appellant/petitioner(s)
S/O Nazir Din
R/O Ghatti Tehsil and District Kathua


                               Through :- Mr. Gagan Oswal, Advocate.
                         v/s

1. UT of J&K through                                        .....Respondent(s)
   Principal Secretary, Department of Home,
   J&K Government, Civil Secretariat/Jammu.
2. District Magistrate, Kathua
3. Senior Superintendent of Police, Kathua
4. Superintendent, Central Jail, Kot
   Bhalwal, Jammu.

                               Through :- Mr. Suneel Malhotra, GA.

CORAM: HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE RAJESH SEKHRI, JUDGE

                                JUDGMENT

01. Challenge in this petition has been thrown to a detention order No. PSA

168 of 2025, dated 25.06.2025, issued by respondent no. 2-District Magistrate

Kathua, vide which petitioner came to be detained, under Section 8 of J&K

Public Safety Act, 1978 [“PSA”] and lodged in Central Jail Kot Bhalwal,

Jammu.

02. Background facts of the case are that Senior Superintendent of Police,

Kathua, describing the petitioner as a desperate character, habitually indulging
in the smuggling of bovine animals, submitted a dossier and connected

documents to District Magistrate Kahtua [“the detaining authority”] for his

detention.

03. The dossier elaborated four FIRs against the petitioner viz., FIR No.

163/2022 U/S 188 IPC, 11 PC Act of P.S Ghagwal, FIR No. 12/2023 u/s 188

IPC, 11 PC Act of P/S Lakhanpur, FIR No. 27/2023 u/s 188 IPC, 11 PC Act of

P/S Rajbagh & FIR No. 53/2025 u/s 331(4) 305 BNS P/S Rajbagh. It was also

alleged that on 27.04.2025, Sh. Karan Singh, Lamberdar and Sh. Prithpaul

Singh, Sarpanch of Halqa Panchayat had confirmed that petitioner was

repeatedly involved in bovine smuggling and theft cases. It was alleged that

petitioner was not only involved in organized crime but he also had close

association/links with hardcore/notorious criminals and his activities created a

sense of insecurity and terror in the area, with potential to disturb public order

and communal harmony.

04. Petitioner is aggrieved of the impugned order inter alia on the following

grounds:-

(a) Because the petitioner is an illiterate as already stated in the
dossier and the grounds of detention were neither read over to
the petitioner nor the petitioner was made to understand the
same in the language which he understands as the petitioner
understands only “Gojri” and further no copy of these
documents were provided to the petitioner in the language
which petitioner understands.

(b) Because no copy of FIR and other documents including the
Bail orders have been served upon the petitioner because only
detention order has been served, therefore, in absence of the
documents as relied upon by the detaining authority, the
applicant has been deprived of making effective representation,
therefore, the order impugned is illegal and deserves to be
revoked.

(c) Because the petitioner has been detained on the basis of false
and frivolous FIRs registered against the petitioner but the
offences mentioned above are not covered under Section 8 of
J&K Public Safety Act 1978 and in the absence of the same the
HCP 111/2025 2
impugned detention order is bad in eyes of law and is required
to be revoked.

(d) Because impugned order has been passed the on the ground of
involvement of the petitioner in FIR’S with respect to which the
petitioner has already been enlarged on bail which have no
foundation and as such, the order impugned is bad in law and
deserves to be revoked.

e) Because the detaining authority has refused to consider the
representation of the petitioner and further no time limit has
been communicated to the petitioner within which he was
supposed to make a representation to the detaining authority
and on this ground also the detention order is required to be
quashed.

(e) Because the petitioner has been detained on the basis of false
and frivolous FIRs registered against the petitioner and that
the grounds of detention are verbatim repeat of dossier of SSP,
Jammu without adding something in the dossier and therefore
on this ground also the detention order is required to quashed.

(f) Because no satisfaction has been recorded by your goodself
that the normal punitive law has failed to prevent the illegal
activities of the applicant which renders necessary the issuance
of detention order, as such, the order impugned is bad in law.

(g) Because the detaining authority by virtue of the detention order
dated 25.06.2025 bearing PSA No. 168 has detained the
petitioner but as per the order one Kamal @ Kaka S/o
Manohar Lal R/o Khanpur Tehsil and District Pathankot was
required to be detained and therefore order impugned is bad in
law and is therefore required to be quashed.

05. It is contention of the petitioner that he made a representation to the

respondents for revocation of the impugned order of his detention, but

respondents refused to consider his representation.

06. Countervailing the stand of the petitioner, ex adverso, respondents are

affront with the contention that none of the legal, constitutional and statutory

right of the petitioner has been violated and impugned order came to be passed

by the detaining authority after due consideration of the dossier submitted by

SSP Kathua, because petitioner was continuously and repeatedly involved in

criminal activities, particularly smuggling of bovine animals over the past

HCP 111/2025 3
several years, which is highly prejudicial to the maintenance of public order and

tranquility. According to the respondents, the material relied upon, including

four FIRs, showed a continuous pattern of conduct on the part of the petitioner,

thereby threatening law and order.

07. It is contention of the respondents that grounds of detention, detention

warrant and all relevant documents, comprising of 47 leaves, were not only

supplied to the petitioner but also read over and explained to him in his

language against a proper receipt duly signed by him. The petitioner and his

father were informed by the detaining authority about the detention order and

grounds on which it was issued. He was also informed about his right to make

representation to the Government against the detention order, if he so desired.

Respondent no. 2 received a representation on behalf of the detenu through his

mother, namely Kali Begum, on 13.08.2025, which was forwarded to Principle

Secretary, Home Department, vide letter dated 14.08.2025, with a copy to SSP

Kathua for intimation. The Home Department, vide order dated 01.09.2025, has

intimated that representation of the petitioner was considered and was found

without merit. This communication is stated to have been endorsed to

Superintendent Central Jail, Kot Bhalwal, Jammu, with a direction to inform the

detenu regarding disposal of the representation and Senior Superintendent,

Central Jail, Jammu, vide his communication dated 11.09.2025 addressed to the

Home, intimated that disposal of the representation had been communicated to

the detenu on 01.09.2025.

08. It is the contention of the respondents that since action taken against the

petitioner in the past under substantive laws did not prove fruitful in deterring

him from indulging in anti-social activities, therefore, for the maintenance of

public order, it was deemed fit to detain him under the provisions of PSA.

HCP 111/2025 4
According to the respondents, on the basis of objective and dispassionate

assessment of a clear and consistent pattern in the criminal activities carried out

by the petitioner, the detaining authority has come to an inescapable conclusion

that there was no likelihood of the detenu being dissuaded from indulging in

similar activities. Therefore, it is contended that detention of the petitioner has

been ordered after due consideration of the dossier received from the sponsoring

authority-SSP Kathua and, keeping in view the gravity of the situation, the

petitioner came to be detained under PSA. The respondents have prayed for

dismissal of the petition.

09. Heard arguments and perused the detention record.

10. Mr. Oswal, learned counsel for the petitioner, has relied upon a host of

pronouncements of this Court including Muskan Ali vs. UT of J&K & Ors.

(HCP No. 72/2024), Zaffar Ahmed vs. UT of J&K & Ors. (HCP No.

66/2024), Hamid Mohd. Vs. UT of J&K & Ors. (HCP No. 04/2024),

Tanveer Hamed @ Jimmy vs. UT of J&K & Ors. (WP (Crl) 87/2022) and

Yaqoob Hussain vs. UT of J&K & Ors. (HCP No. 112/2025) to reiterate the

grounds urged in the memo of petition.

11. At the foremost, petitioner is aggrieved of the impugned order on the

ground that neither all the relevant documents, including copies of FIRs and bail

orders, were furnished to him so as to enable him to make an effective

representation, nor the dossier and grounds of detention were read over and

explained to him in Gojri language which he understands.

12. The respondents, in their counter affidavit, have taken a clear stand that

not only relevant documents/material were provided to the petitioner against

proper receipt, but documents were also read over and explained to him in his

language which he fully understood, and he was informed about his right to

HCP 111/2025 5
make a representation, with respect to which he put his signatures in

acknowledgement.

13. A perusal of the detention record would also show that upon execution of

the impugned order, 47 leaves of documents came to be supplied to the

petitioner against proper receipt. They are stated to have been read over and

explained to him in Hindi/Urdu language, which he understood, and his

signatures as a token of acknowledgement have been obtained. The petitioner

and his father were informed about the detention order and the grounds on

which it came to be issued against him. He was also informed about his right to

make representation to the Government against the detention order, if he so

desired. Pertinently, the petitioner has not filed any rejoinder to refute the stand

of the respondents that entire relevant material was furnished to him, relevant

documents were read over and explained to him in his language and he was

informed about his constitutional right to make his representation.

14. Since respondents, in their counter affidavit, have denied allegations of

the petitioner that entire relevant material was not supplied to him, same was not

read over and explained to him in his language and he was informed about his

right to make an effective representation, it was incumbent upon the petitioner

to rebut the stand of the respondents/detaining authority by filing a rejoinder

affidavit, which he not chosen to do. In these circumstances, categoric stand of

the respondents that not only relevant documents were provided to him, but

same were read over and explained to the petitioner in his language, remains

unrebutted. It thus implies that detaining authority and the executing officer, in

this respect have scrupulously adhered to the statutory requirements and

constitutional obligations on their part.

HCP 111/2025 6

15. Another ground urged by the petitioner and his counsel is that he came to

be detained on the basis of false and frivolous FIRs for offences which,

according to him, are not covered under Section 8 PSA, and in all the said FIRs,

he has already been enlarged on bail.

16. Learned counsel for the petitioner, has vehemently argued that since

petitioner was enlarged on bail by the competent court in all the FIRs alleged

against him and, prosecution never filed any application for cancellation of bail

extended in his favour by the concerned courts from time to time, recourse to

PSA by the detaining authority is illegal.

17. It is a settled proposition of law that power of preventive detention is

precautionary in nature and can be exercised on reasonable apprehension and it

may or may not relate to an offence. It is also trite that basis of a detention order

is the satisfaction of the detaining authority regarding reasonable probability of

the detenu indulging in activities similar to his past conduct and to prevent him

from reoffending.

18. The allegation against the petitioner is that he is habitually indulging in

criminal activities of bovine smuggling. Four FIRs registered against him for

similar offences relating to bovine smuggling failed to deter him. He was not

only involved in organized crime but he also had close association/links with

hardcore and notorious criminals. Therefore, taking into account his past

activities, the detaining authority found it imperative to detain the petitioner

with a view to prevent him from indulging in similar activities.

19. A five judge bench of Hon’ble Supreme Court in Haradhan Saha vs.

State of West Bengal & Ors; (1975) 3 SCC 198, in a similar fact situation, has

held that preventive detention has nothing to do with the commission of an

offence by the detenu or any prosecution against him. It is clearly ruled by the

HCP 111/2025 7
Apex Court that preventive detention can be ordered before or during the

prosecution and even with or without prosecution of a criminal case against the

detenu. It can be made in anticipation. Preventive detention can be ordered even

after discharge or acquittal of an accused. The position of law crystallized in

Haradhan Saha is that pendency of a criminal case is no bar to order

preventive detention and Article 14, in such cases, takes a back seat because

preventive detention and prosecution are not synonymous.

Relevant excerpt captured in Paras 32 to 34 of the judgment for the ease

of reference is extracted below:-

“32. The power of preventive detention is qualitatively different from punitive
detention. The power of preventive detention is a precautionary power
exercised in reasonable anticipation. It may or may not relate to an offence.
It is not a parallel proceeding. It does not overlap with prosecution even if it
relies on certain facts for which prosecution may be launched or may have
been launched. An order of preventive detention may be, made before or
during prosecution. An order of preventive detention may be made with or
without prosecution and in anticipation or after discharge or even acquittal.
The pendency of prosecution is no bar to an order of preventive detention. An
order of preventive detention is also not a bar to prosecution.

33. Article 14 is inapplicable because preventive detention and prosecution
are not synonymous. The purposes are different. The authorities are
different. The nature of proceedings is different. In a prosecution an accused
is sought to be punished for a past act. In preventive detention, the past act is
merely the material for inference about the future course of probable conduct
on the part of the detenu.

34. The recent decisions of this Court on this subject are many. The decisions
in Borjahan Gorey v. State of W. B., Ashim Kumar Ray V. State of W. B.;
Abdul Aziz V. District Magistrate, Burdwan and Debu Mahato V. State of W.
B.
correctly lay down the principles to be followed as to whether a detention
order is valid or not.
The decision in Biram Chand v. State of U. P. which is a
Division Bench decision of two learned Judges is contrary to the other Bench
decisions consisting in each case of three learned Judges. The principles
which can be broadly stated are these. First, merely because a detenu is liable
to be tried in a criminal court for the commission of a criminal offence or to
be proceeded against for preventing him from committing offences dealt with
in Chapter VIII of the Code of Criminal Procedure would not by itself debar
the Government from taking action for his detention under the Act. Second,
the fact that the Police arrests a person and later on enlarges him on bail and
initiates steps to prosecute him under the Code of Criminal Procedure and
even lodges a first information report may be no bar against the District
Magistrate issuing an order under the preventive detention. Third, where the
concerned person is actually in jail custody at the time when an order of
detention is passed against him and is not likely to be released for a fair
length of time, it may be possible to contend that there could be no
HCP 111/2025 8
satisfaction on the part of the detaining authority as to the likelihood of such
a person indulging in activities which would jeopardise the security of the
State or the public order. Fourth, the mere circumstance that a detention
order is passed during the pendency of the prosecution will not violate the
order. Fifth, the order of detention is a precautionary measure. It is based on
a reasonable prognosis of the future behaviour of a person based on his past
conduct in the light of the surrounding circumstances.”

20. Pertinently, a similar view was expressed earlier by another constitutional Bench of

Hon’ble Supreme Court in the State of Bombay vs. Atma Ram Shridhar Vaidya; AIR

1951 SC 157.

21. An identical view has been taken by Supreme Court in Naresh Kumar

Goyal vs. Union of India; (2005) 8 SCC 276:- wherein it was observed as under

“It is trite law that an order of detention is not a curative or reformative or
punitive action, but a preventive action, avowed object of which being to
prevent the anti-social and subversive elements from imperiling the welfare
of the country or the security of the nation or from disturbing the public
tranquility or from indulging in smuggling activities or from engaging in
illicit traffic in narcotic drugs and psychotropic substances etc. Preventive
Detention is devised to afford protection to society. The authorities on the
subject have consistently taken the view that preventive detention is devised
to afford protection to society. The object is not to punish a man for having
done something but to intercept before he does it, and to prevent him from
doing so.”

22. The aforesaid enunciation further came to be reiterated with approval by

the Apex Court in Union of India vs. Dimple Happy Dhakad; AIR 2019 SC

3248.

23. In view of aforesaid observations of Hon’ble Supreme Court, the case law

relied by learned counsel for the petitioner, having regard to the facts and

circumstances of the present case, is not attracted.

24. It is manifest from the observations of Hon’ble Supreme Court that

pendency of prosecution against a detenu is no bar for the detaining authority to

pass an order of preventive detention, and even discharge or acquittal of the

detenu in a criminal case against him does not preclude the detaining authority

from invoking precautionary jurisdiction under the preventive detention laws.

Therefore, contention of learned counsel for the petitioner that criminal
HCP 111/2025 9
prosecution could not be circumvented or subverted by resort to preventive

detention is legally flawed for the simple reason that purpose of preventive

detention is different from criminal prosecution. Discharge or acquittal or grant

of bail to a detenu operates in different fields. In a criminal prosecution, it is

proof beyond reasonable doubt which is a paramount consideration, whereas in

cases of preventive detention what is necessary is subjective satisfaction of the

detaining authority that ordinary law of the land had failed to prevent and deter

the detenu from indulging in similar activities. In preventive detention cases, the

past act of the detenu serves as a material for drawing an inference about the

future course of his probable conduct, as held by the Apex Court in Haradhan

Saha. Therefore, preventive detention of a detenu cannot be held illegal merely

because detenu has been bailed out in criminal cases against him and

prosecution failed to move the concerned court for cancellation of his bail. If the

object of detention is to prevent a habitual offender from re-offending in future,

which may tend to create a law and order problem or disturb the public order

and communal harmony, resort to preventive detention is perfectly justified.

25. The next ground urged by the petitioner is that grounds of detention are

verbatim repetition of the dossier of SSP Jammu and detaining authority failed

to record its subjective satisfaction that alleged activities of the petitioner are

prejudicial to the maintenance of public order. This contention of the petitioner

is found specious and misconceived.

26. The details of multiple FIRs against the petitioner, with clear reference to

his past activities in the dossier as also in the grounds of detention, in fact

reflects manifest awareness and application of mind on the part of the detaining

authority before it embarked to pass the impugned order. It is apparent from the

grounds of detention that respondent no. 2-the detaining authority passed the

HCP 111/2025 10
impugned order on reasonable prognosis of the future behaviour of the

petitioner based on his past conduct and in the light of attending circumstances

of the case.

27. High Court, in exercise of its writ jurisdiction, has a very limited scope to

examine the grounds of detention and sufficiency of the material relied by the

detaining authority. It cannot sit in appeal and final fault with the subjective

satisfaction derived by the detaining authority and substitute its own opinion

when the grounds of detention are precise, pertinent and proximate. It is

exclusive domain of the administration to ensure the maintenance of public

peace and tranquility. The subjective satisfaction drawn by the detaining

authority that ordinary law of the land has not proved sufficient to deter the

detenu from indulging in repeated anti-social activities is not open to objective

scrutiny by the High Court in exercise of writ jurisdiction.

28. Another ground urged by the petitioner to assail the impugned order is

that detaining authority refused to consider his representation. However, a

perusal of the record reveals that respondent No. 2 received a representation on

behalf of the petitioner through his mother, namely, Kali Begum on 13.08.2025,

which was immediately forwarded to the Principal Secretary, Home, on the next

day, i.e., 14.08.2025. The Home Department, vide order dated 01.09.2025,

intimated that representation preferred by the petitioner was considered and was

found without merit. The Senior Superintendent, Central Jail, Jammu, vide his

communication dated 11.09.2025, intimated the Home Department that disposal

of the representation was communicated to the petitioner on 01.09.2025 itself.

The respondents, in their counter affidavit, have not only denied the allegation

of the petitioner that they refused to consider his representation but placed on

record sufficient material to assert that representation filed on behalf of the

HCP 111/2025 11
petitioner was duly considered and decision was conveyed to him by the Senior

Superintendent of the concerned jail. The detention record belies the allegation

of the petitioner that respondents refused to consider his representation. The

record, rather bears testimony to the fact that representation, preferred on behalf

of the petitioner has been duly considered.

29. At last but not the least, learned counsel for the petitioner has drawn

attention of this Court to the impugned order, by virtue of which, though one

Kamal @ Kaka S/o Manohar Lal, R/o Khanpur, Tehsil and District Pathankot,

has been directed to be detained in Central Jail, Kot Bhalwal, Jammu, but

petitioner, Shokat Ali has been taken into detention. According to learned

counsel for the petitioner, this is a case of non-application of mind on the part of

the detaining authority.

30. If the impugned order of detention is carefully gone through, as a whole it

is evident that detaining authority has recorded the satisfaction that petitioner is

a hardcore criminal who has indulged in a number of criminal activities, such as

smuggling of bovine animals from District Kathua, and that his remaining at

large involves a greater risk to the maintenance of public order, therefore, it

was, considered necessary to detain him on the basis of grounds enclosed as

Annexure-I. However, in the concluding para of the order, one Kamal @ Kaka

has been directed to be detained. There appears to be a typographical mistake. A

perusal of the detention record reveals that the detaining authority has issued a

corrigendum on 30.06.2025 that “name of the subject being detained may kindly

be read as Shokat Ali S/o Nazir Din R/o Ghatti Tehsil and District Kathua in

Para 3rd, line 3rd”. The impugned order, therefore, cannot be quashed on this

technical ground alone.

HCP 111/2025 12

31. Viewed from any angle, I do not find any illegality or infirmity in the

impugned order of detention. The grounds of detention, on the basis of which

impugned order came to be passed, are found definite and unambiguous. The

petitioner was informed about the grounds of detention with sufficient clarity in

the language which he fully understood. What weighed with the detaining

authority while passing the impugned order were the past activities and the facts

and figures detailed therein, on the basis of which the detaining authority came

to the conclusion that petitioner was required to be placed under preventive

detention in order to prevent him from indulging in similar activities.

32. For the foregoing reasons, present petition is dismissed and impugned

order is upheld.

(Rajesh Sekhri)
Judge

JAMMU
05.03.2026.

Abinash

Whether the judgment is speaking? Yes
Whether the judgment is reportable? Yes

HCP 111/2025 13



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