STATE vs JAVED KHAN — 526/2026

Case under Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act 1985 Section 22,25,8. Disposed: Contested--DISMISSED on 03rd June 2026.

Bail Matters

CNR: DLSE010023712026

Case disposed

Filing Number

1142/2026

Filing Date

24-02-2026

Registration No

526/2026

Registration Date

24-02-2026

Court

District and Sessions Judge, South-East , Saket

Judge

9-Additional Sessions Judge

Decision Date

03rd June 2026

Nature of Disposal

Contested--DISMISSED

FIR Details

FIR Number

296

Police Station

CRIME BRANCH-SOUTH EAST

Year

2025

Acts & Sections

Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act 1985 Section 22,25,8

Petitioner(s)

STATE

Respondent(s)

JAVED KHAN

Hearing History

Judge: 9-Additional Sessions Judge

03-06-2026

Disposed

02-06-2026

For Bail

01-06-2026

For Bail

23-05-2026

For Bail

21-05-2026

For Bail

Final Orders / Judgements

03-06-2026
COPY OF ORDER

Case Summary: State v. Javed Khan (526/2026) The court dismissed Javed Khan's bail application in an NDPS case involving alleged organized trafficking of psychotropic medicines. Khan was accused of conspiring with co-accused persons to illegally store and export 379.15 kg of medicines (Tramadol, Alprazolam, etc.) to the UK through false export channels. The court found reasonable grounds for belief in Khan's guilt based on incriminating WhatsApp chats with photographs of prohibited medicines, CDR connectivity with co-accused, and his coordinating role in storage and export arrangements—distinguishing his central role from co-accused who received lesser bail. The statutory embargo under Section 37 of the NDPS Act applied, precluding bail release. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

Interim Orders

casestatus.in Summary

Case Summary: State v. Javed Khan (526/2026) The court dismissed Javed Khan's bail application in an NDPS case involving alleged organized trafficking of psychotropic medicines. Khan was accused of conspiring with co-accused persons to illegally store and export 379.15 kg of medicines (Tramadol, Alprazolam, etc.) to the UK through false export channels. The court found reasonable grounds for belief in Khan's guilt based on incriminating WhatsApp chats with photographs of prohibited medicines, CDR connectivity with co-accused, and his coordinating role in storage and export arrangements—distinguishing his central role from co-accused who received lesser bail. The statutory embargo under Section 37 of the NDPS Act applied, precluding bail release. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.

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