VIJAY @ VIJAY YADAV vs STATE OF HARYANA — CRM-M/9911/2026
Disposed: --DISMISSED on 24th March 2026.
CNR: PHHC010294422026
Filing Number
CRM-M/11369/2026
Filing Date
18-Feb-2026
Registration No
CRM-M/9911/2026
Registration Date
18-Feb-2026
Judge
Mr. Justice Jasjit Singh Bedi
Coram
Mr. Justice Jasjit Singh Bedi
Bench Type
Single
Judicial Branch
CRIMINAL BRANCH
Decision Date
24-Mar-2026
Nature of Disposal
--DISMISSED
Last updated 11-Apr-2026
Petitioner(s)
-
1.VIJAY @ VIJAY YADAV
Adv. KULDEEP ATTRI
Respondent(s)
-
1.STATE OF HARYANA
Case History
-
Case disposedDisposed
-
24-Mar-2026
Mr. Justice Jasjit Singh BediView PDF
The High Court of Punjab and Haryana dismissed Vijay Yadav's anticipatory bail petition in a corruption case (FIR No. 40 dated 20.11.2025). Yadav, a Computer Operator, was accused of demanding and accepting ₹2,000 as a bribe via online transfer to facilitate loan record modifications, while co-accused Patwari Vikram was caught red-handed accepting ₹10,000. The court found a prima facie case established against Yadav based on witness statements, bank transfer evidence, and conversation transcripts, holding that custodial interrogation was necessary for investigation completion. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
-
18-Feb-2026
Case filed
Registration No. CRM-M/9911/2026
The High Court of Punjab and Haryana dismissed Vijay Yadav's anticipatory bail petition in a corruption case (FIR No. 40 dated 20.11.2025). Yadav, a Computer Operator, was accused of demanding and accepting ₹2,000 as a bribe via online transfer to facilitate loan record modifications, while co-accused Patwari Vikram was caught red-handed accepting ₹10,000. The court found a prima facie case established against Yadav based on witness statements, bank transfer evidence, and conversation transcripts, holding that custodial interrogation was necessary for investigation completion. This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
Explore other courts